The United Nations Security Council approved measures Thursday to restrict how the Islamic State militant group raises money.
The 15-nation council will expand a resolution against al-Qaida to the Islamic State group. The group has seized large areas of Syria and Iraq, and it is trying to increase its strength in Libya.
Samantha Power is the U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations. Wednesday, she told reporters “this resolution…will be a new piece of international law.”
She said the resolution would require countries to do more to stop the money being sent to terrorists.
Power says nations have limited the group’s funding somewhat. But she says the group still trades cultural objects and smuggles oil. She notes that the group demands money from people who live in the areas the terrorists occupy. But she says “this is a problem that we should be able to solve.”
She said if an effort is made to attack the Islamic State group’s funding sources and assets “in an intensified and even more aggressive way, that is going to have a material effect on their ability” to carry out attacks.
I’m Jim Tedder.
VOA United Nations Correspondent Margaret Besheer reported this story. Christopher Jones-Cruise adapted it for VOA Learning English. Kathleen Struck and George Grow were the editors.
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Words in This Story
piece – n. an amount that is cut or separated from a larger section of something
smuggle – v. to move (someone or something) from one country into another illegally and secretly
assets – n. something that is owned by a person, company, etc. -- usually plural