PRESS RELEASE: GCTF 21st GCTF Coordinating Committee Meeting / Egypt and the EU present their strategic vision for the GCTF

PRESS RELEASE: GCTF 21st GCTF Coordinating Committee Meeting / Egypt and the EU present their strategic vision for the GCTF

04 May 2023

On 4 May 2023, Egypt and the European Union co-chaired the 21st Global Counterterrorism Forum (GCTF) Coordinating Committee Meeting, under the auspices of H.E. Sameh Shoukry, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Egypt, in Cairo. Over 150 senior counterterrorism and criminal justice officials and practitioners from more than thirty countries discussed future action to counter global terrorism threats. At the meeting, Co-Chairs Egypt and the European Union presented their vision for the strategic direction and objectives of the GCTF during their tenure (2023-2025). Central to this vision is a more action-oriented and responsive Forum, delivering value where it is most needed.

H.E. Sameh Shoukry, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Egypt, and H.E. Ambassador Charles Fries, Deputy Secretary General of the European External Action Service, opened the Coordinating Committee meeting, underscoring their joint vision for a responsive approach to the ever-changing counterterrorism landscape. In keeping with this, during the meeting, GCTF members engaged with practitioners from West Africa on the challenges facing the region and the most pressing needs to tackle the rehabilitation and social reintegration of former fighters and their family members, where the GCTF would seek to provide support.

“We are honored to be hosting the first GCTF Coordinating Committee meeting co-chaired with the European Union, in which all parties underscored their collective commitment to continue fighting this global scourge. As Co-Chairs, we recognize the importance of driving global counterterrorism efforts and preventing and countering violent extremism conducive to terrorism, including through addressing the root causes of terrorism and countering terrorist narratives and ideologies. We are determined, throughout our tenure, to focus our attention on new and emerging threats”, said H.E. Sameh Shoukry, Minister of Foreign Affairs,  Egypt.

“We are in Africa today, where the threat of terrorism is rapidly evolving, with global implications. Our message is clear: we must focus on tackling the scourge of terrorism across the continent and we must do so together with a wide range of actors from the ground – governments, communities, civil society. The EU is committed to assuring the GCTF is dynamic, action-oriented and remains fit-for-purpose. Africa is a strategic priority of our tenure as Co-Chair. We hope to engage and hear more from those directly affected and provide responses to the challenges they face. Embracing more African partners within the Forum would represent a key step in this direction,” said H.E. Charles Fries, Deputy Secretary General of the European External Action Service.

During the event, Morocco formally handed over the Co-Chair to Egypt. The GCTF members expressed their gratitude to Morocco for their unstinting work over the past eight years as Co-Chair.

“Over the course of three consecutive mandates, Morocco has embarked on an exciting journey as Co-Chair of the Forum to steer GCTF efforts as a crucial platform for international cooperation on counterterrorism. We are honored for the trust and confidence bestowed upon us, as we have dedicated the best of our efforts to promoting the Forum’s vision. Thanks to this collective engagement, we have made remarkable strides, and achieved outstanding endeavors. Continuing this commitment, Morocco’s engagement to the GCTF mission will remain unequivocal. We will spare no efforts to pursue advancing the Forum’s vision and goals,” said Mr. Ismail Chekkori, Director of Global Issues, at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, African Cooperation and Moroccan Expatriates of Morocco.

The Co-Chairs, Egypt and the European Union, expressed their commitment to working with the GCTF members to implement a comprehensive and global approach that addresses the root causes of terrorism and provides adequate – and operational – responses to threats on the ground. They underlined the importance of a deepened engagement with other actors in so doing, while stressing the importance they attach to greater collaboration with the three Institutions “inspired” by the GCTF – the Global Community Engagement and Resilience Fund (GCERF), Hedayah, and the International Institute for Justice and the Rule of Law (IIJ) – in delivering on GCTF priorities and the Co-Chairs’ vision.