NEW YORK: Pakistan has welcomed the “thoughtful and innovative” new report released by the office of the United Nations secretary-general that set out Antonio Guterres’ vision for the future of global cooperation, insisting the agency must be reformed.
“It is quite clear that we need to look at mobilizing international solidarity, both at the national and particularly at the international level as we witness vaccine apartheid,” Pakistan’s ambassador at UN, Munir Akram, said at a meeting of the General Assembly convened to launch the report.
The report — Our Common Agenda — sets out a bold plan for how the global community must tackle the climate crisis and loss of biodiversity, pandemics, inequality and other existential crisis facing the world.
It also reflects upon the solutions needed to lift the world away from divisiveness and fragmentation and build upon lessons learnt from recent crises including Covid-19.
“I would like to welcome the report that secretary general has submitted to us, the common agenda, and his eloquent presentation of the report this morning,” Akram said.
“We must look to the future as the report, as the secretary general has advocated, but we also need to hold on to the past, to the principles of the charter, to the SDGs [Sustainable Development Goals] as the blueprint for development and for many of the commitments that have been made, and which we hope will be fulfilled, and not be lost in new processes.”
The report presents a rich field of ideas and proposals for new summits and new processes, he said.
“We need to see what action we can derive from the processes,” the ambassador said, adding that “what are the actual steps that are needed in concrete terms in order to deal with the crisis of today and the challenges of tomorrow”.
Referring to the world body’s main responsibility for peace and security, the envoy said: “Today, we are facing a surfeit of conflicts and disputes, old lingering conflicts, new and emerging threats to international peace and security and we believe that these are the kinds of threats that require attention at the level of leadership and the attention of those concerned at the highest levels.”
Without such engagement, he said, it would be difficult to resolve some of these enduring conflicts and disputes.
At the same time, he added, a global arms race was taking place that has had no parallel in history, even during the Cold War, the nature of the arms race that was being undertaken at the present time, required political attention and political action, at the level of the international community and the United Nations.
“We must reform, the UN system, the governance system, the Security Council, the General Assembly, the Economic and Social Council, and not throw away the Trusteeship Council because it epitomises the era of decolonisation, and decolonisation has not yet completed,” he said.
“I hope we’ll be able to analyse why we have failed in reforming the United Nations bodies. And what is it that they are meant to do, and meant to achieve and how this can be achieved in better ways.
“I think these are some of the self-reflections, we will have to engage in, as we discuss the secretary general’s very rich and thoughtful and innovative report, as we go forward,” he said.
While introducing the report, Guterres had prefaced his remarks with a scathing overview of the parlous state of a world he described as being under enormous stress, and warning that the world risks a future of “serious instability and climate chaos”.
“From the climate crisis to our suicidal war on nature and the collapse of biodiversity, our global response is too little, too late”, declared he. “Unchecked inequality is undermining social cohesion, creating fragilities that affect us all. Technology is moving ahead without guard rails to protect us from its unforeseen consequences.”
The UN chief went on to describe the extensive consultations that fed into its development, a listening exercise that led the agency to the conclusion that enhanced multilateralism is seen as the way to deal with the world’s crises.
Two contrasting futures are laid out in the report: One of breakdown and perpetual crisis, and another in which there is a breakthrough, to a greener, safer future.
The doomsday scenario describes a world in which Covid-19 is endlessly mutating, because rich countries hoard vaccines, and health systems are overwhelmed.
In that future, the planet becomes uninhabitable due to rising temperatures and extreme weather events, and a million species are on the brink of extinction.
This is coupled by continuous erosion of human rights, a massive loss of jobs and income, and growing protests and unrest, which are met by violent repression.
Or, we could go the other way, sharing vaccines equitably, and sparking a sustainable recovery in which the global economy is retooled to be more sustainable, resilient, and inclusive.
By decarbonising the economy, global temperature rises would be limited, countries heavily affected by climate change would be supported, and ecosystems would be preserved for future generations, the report said.
This approach would herald a new era for multilateralism, in which countries work together to solve global problems; the international system works fast to protect everyone in emergencies, and the UN is universally recognised as a trusted platform for collaboration.