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TWN
Info Service on UN Sustainable Development (Nov21/06)
23 November 2021
Third World Network
Dear friends and colleagues,
We
are pleased to share the latest UN Monitor update from Social Watch
and Global Policy Forum on important statements made by Heads of State/Government
at the UN General Assembly, with a focus on:
1.
COVID-19, Vaccines and COVAX
2.
Financing, debt and measuring growth
3.
UN Reform
With
best wishes,
Third World Network
UN
Monitor #29
22
November 2021
Heard at the 76th Session of the UN General Assembly High-level meetings
Download
UN Monitor #29 (pdf version).
Against
the backdrop of COVID-19’s ongoing impact on economies and societies
worldwide, the United Nations is bringing the lens of COVID-19 recovery
to its High level meetings. September saw the launch of the UN Secretary-General’s
‘Our Common Agenda on 12 September’, the opening of the UN General
Debate on 14 September and a series of High-level meetings ranging
from sustainable development to nuclear disarmament.
UN75
Declaration, presents the Secretary-General’s vision for his second
term. It identifies 12 priority areas for renewed multilateralism:
equitable pandemic recovery, climate, peace, international law, women
and girls, trust, digital cooperation, UN reform, sustainable financing,
partnerships, youth, and preparation for future crises. Taking into
consideration input from Member States and other stakeholders, the
report provides a roadmap to respond to current and future global
challenges and emphasizes that the time for action is running out.
The
UN General Assembly General Debate held both hybrid and in-person
events on the theme of ‘Building Resilience Through Hope’, with statements
highlighting government priorities for the year ahead. On 20 September,
the Secretary-General convened the second annual SDG Moment for the
Decade of Action, underlining the need for equitable and inclusive
recovery efforts and identifying action needed to achieve the Sustainable
Development Goals (SDGs). As the world charts recovery from the ongoing
COVID-19 pandemic, inequitable recovery rates continue to risk the
achievement by 2030 of the SDGs.
Following
is a selection of statements, commitments and declarations made by
Member States and UN leadership on several priority issues including
COVID-19 recovery, financing and debt, UN reform, and the climate
crisis. For statements on public-private partnerships and the push
for “networked multilateralism”, see
GPW UN Monitor #28.
COVID-19,
Vaccines and COVAX
- “First,
we need to end this pandemic. Our response has been too slow and
too unequal. I call on all to mobilize the global vaccination plan
that doubles vaccine production to reach 70 percent of the world’s
population by the middle of next year.”
– António Guterres, UN Secretary-General
at the SDG Moment
- “It
is an indictment on humanity that more than 82 percent of the world’s
vaccine doses have been acquired by wealthy countries, while less
than 1 percent has gone to low-income countries. Unless we address
this as a matter of urgency, the pandemic will last much longer
and new mutations of the virus will spread and emerge.”
– President Ramaphosa, South Africa at the GA General
Debate
- “I
have stressed on many occasions the need to make vaccines a global
public good and ensure vaccine accessibility and affordability in
developing countries. Of pressing priority is to ensure the fair
and equitable distribution of vaccines globally. China will strive
to provide a total of two billion doses of vaccines to the world
by the end of this year. In addition to donating 100 million US
dollars to COVAX, China will donate 100 million doses of vaccines
to other developing countries in the course of this year.”
– President Xi Jinping, People’s Republic of China at
the GA General Debate
- “To
fight this pandemic, we need a collective act of science and political
will. We need to act now to get shots in arms as fast as possible
and to expand access to oxygen, tests, treatments to save lives
around the world.”
– President Biden, USA at the General Debate
- “[T]o
defeat the pandemic, we must ensure that vaccines are accessible
to everyone in the world. Switzerland is committed to ensuring fair
and affordable access to vaccines, treatments and diagnostics. Our
country contributes to the Vaccine Alliance and supports the COVAX
AMC initiative for low and middle-income countries with 155 million
US dollars (CHF 145 million).”
– President Parmelin, Switzerland at the GA General Debate
- “Costa
Rica advocates for the COVID-19 vaccines to be available to all
the world population as a global public good. The COVAX promise
must be fulfilled and developed countries can make it happen.”
– President Quesada, Costa Rica at the GA General Debate
- “COVID-19
will persist as long as it is not defeated everywhere. The key is
vaccines! Vaccinating the world as soon as possible is the way we
overcome. Vaccine equity is of paramount importance in this regard.”
– President Solih, Maldives at the GA General Debate
- “When
we take stock of global vaccine distribution, the picture is at
best mixed. Too many people are still waiting for the life-saving
vaccine, and this is why the distribution of vaccines must not be
an instrument for countries to showcase themselves or grant tactical
favours.”
– President Steinmeier, Germany at the GA General Debate
- “There
is a man-made drought of vaccines ravaging poor countries. Rich
countries hoard life-saving vaccines, while poor nations wait for
trickles. They now talk of booster shots, while developing countries
consider half-doses just to get by. The plain fact is – this pandemic
will not end unless the virus is defeated everywhere. Vaccines are
key to achieving this.”
– President Duterte, Philippines at the GA General Debate
- “We
agree that we need to strengthen the global health architecture.
The COVID-19 pandemic, which we are still battling at the global
level, has made this obvious, especially for developing countries.”
– Ambassador Fatima, Bangladesh at the Common Agenda Launch
Financing,
debt, and measuring growth
- “We
should care about the special needs for developing countries. We
may employ such means as debt suspension and development aid to
help developing countries, particularly vulnerable ones facing exceptional
difficulties, with emphasis on addressing unbalanced and inadequate
development among and within countries…China has pledged an additional
three billion US dollars of international assistance in the next
three years to support developing countries in responding to COVID-19
and promoting economic and social recovery.”
– President Xi Jinping, People’s Republic of China at
the GA General Debate
- “The
cooperation at the G7 and G20 to issue new Special Drawing Rights
is another positive example. A further voluntary reallocation of
new SDRs to countries that need them most, will help create the
fiscal space required for a faster and more equitable recovery from
the pandemic”.
– President Kagame, Rwanda at the GA General Debate
- “[T]he
G20 Debt Standstill Initiative is a welcome response to the fiscal
and liquidity challenges faced by least developed economies. The
agreement on the allocation of 650 billion US dollars in Special
Drawing Rights is significant, but it is insufficient to meet the
extent of the need. South Africa therefore reiterates its call for
25 percent of the total allocation, amounting to around 165 billion
US dollars, to be made available to the African continent.”
– President Ramaphosa, South Africa at the GA General
Debate
- “Of
the 20 percent of climate financing provided on adaption, only 2
percent of that support went to SIDS countries. Further, of that
2 percent, at least half of those funds were not in the form of
grants, but in the form of loans. We urge the UN to address this
inequity and reduce the artificial barriers to allowing small countries
to access climate finance.”
– President Whipps, Palau at the GA General Debate
- “Costa
Rica has proposed the creation of the Fund to Alleviate the COVID-19
Economy (FACE). This is an extraordinary support fund of nearly
half a trillion US dollars, funded by 0.7 percent of the Gross Domestic
Product of the largest and most robust economies in the world –
those representing 80 percent of world GDP -, to be intermediated
by multilateral development banks, as concessional loans to developing
countries.”
– President Quesada, Republic of Costa Rica at the GA
General Debate
- “There‣s
a pressing need to bridge the SDG financing gap, especially for
developing countries, where the human development deficit is indeed
greatest…. the resources to finance the SDGs are certainly available.
The question raised is whether the rich countries of the world are
thus prepared to accept the new paradigm of the SDGs and play their
part or not.”
– President Akufo-Addo, Ghana at the SDG Moment
- “We
call on international financial institutions, the World Bank, the
private sector, and the international banking sector… to promote
measures to prevent our countries [MICs] incurring unsustainable
levels of debt and to manage to direct their scarce resources to
the socioeconomic recovery to the crisis.”
– Secretary of Foreign Affairs Cassaubon, Mexico at the
GA General Debate
UN
Reform
- “Affirming
the role of the United Nations, but struggling with reforms and
denying resources implies, in practice, weakening multilateralism
and fostering crisis situations, with negative effects for everyone.”
– President Sousa, Portugal at the GA General Debate
- “South
Africa reiterates its call for urgent reform and a move to text-based
negotiations through which an agreement can ultimately be reached.
We must address the under-representation of the African continent
in the UN system, and ensure that the voice of the African continent
wherein 1.3 billion people reside and also of the Global South in
general, is strengthened in the multilateral system.”
– President Ramaphosa, South Africa at the GA General
Debate
- “Let
us continue to defend rules-based multilateralism. Switzerland is
committed to an effective and efficient United Nations and supports
reforms aimed at improving conflict prevention, strengthening the
UN development system and modernizing management methods.”
– President Parmelin, Switzerland at the GA General Debate
- “If
the UN wants to remain relevant, it will need to improve its effectiveness
and enhance its reliability… institutions of global governance have
damaged the credibility they had built, which was the result of
decades of hard work. It is essential that we constantly strengthen
the UN in order to safeguard global order.…”
– Prime Minister Modi, India at the GA General Debate
- “[T]he
UN can be revitalized through the reform of its own governance structures
which must reflect the changing world we live in today….to revitalize
the UN and the impact of its activities across the world, we must
seek to strengthen public-private partnerships to overcome the financing
challenge.”
– President Farmajo, Somalia at the GA General Debate
- “We
support a reform of the UN Security Council, in which we seek a
permanent seat.”
– President Bolsonaro, Brazil at the GA General Debate
- “In
order to meet the challenges of the modern age, the UN and its Security
Council must show willingness to change and implement long overdue
reforms…. The reform should ensure more equitable representation
from African, Latin American and Eastern European countries.”
– President Levits, Latvia at the GA General Debate
- “[A]
reform that increases only nonpermanent seats with long term mandates
and with possibilities for immediate reflection is viable and would
represent a substantial change to the functioning of the body to
which we entrust the maintenance of international peace and security.
Mexico has proposed… that the right to veto of the five permanent
members be regulated. More than one hundred states support us in
this initiative.”
– Secretary of Foreign Affairs Cassaubon, Mexico at the
GA General Debate
Many
of these issues, particularly regarding financing were taken up again
at the COP26 in Glasgow, just concluded and will be taken up again
at the LDC Forum in Doha, as well as at Financing for Development,
the HLPF on 2030 Agenda, and more.
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