UN chief urges divided nations to approve blueprint to address global
challenges from climate to AI
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[September 19, 2024]
By EDITH M. LEDERER
UNITED NATIONS (AP) — The United Nations chief urged the world’s divided
nations on Wednesday to compromise and approve a blueprint to address
global challenges from conflicts and climate change to artificial
intelligence and reforming the U.N. and global financial institutions.
Secretary-General Antonio Guterres told reporters that discussions on
the “Pact of the Future” are in their final stretch and failure to reach
the required consensus among all 193 U.N. member nations “would be
tragic.”
A year ago, Guterres sounded an alarm about the survival of humanity and
the planet and summoned world leaders to a Summit of the Future at their
global gathering this year to unite and take action to reform the U.N.
and other institutions established after World War II and address new
global threats. It is taking place Sunday and Monday, just before
Tuesday's start of the annual high-level meeting at the U.N. General
Assembly.
Negotiations on the 30-page pact, now in its fourth revision, have been
taking place for months, and in recent interviews and at Wednesday’s
press conference the secretary-general has faced questions about its
lack of vision, and what is different from U.N. documents adopted in
recent years that haven’t been implemented.
“It’s very simple,” the U.N. chief replied.
All the previous “extraordinary, important declarations” were about what
is needed to meet the challenges of the 21st century, he said. The
Summit of the Future is about implementing those challenges, which
requires reform of global institutions established after World War II
including the United Nations.
Guterres stressed that in every area — from climate to AI — “there is a
serious problem of governance,” and that’s what the Summit of the Future
is about.
The draft Pact of the Future says world leaders are gathering “at a time
of profound global transformation,” and it warns of “rising catastrophic
and existential risks” that could tip people everywhere “into a future
of persistent crisis and breakdown.”
But the draft says leaders are coming to the U.N. “to protect the needs
and interests of present and future generations through actions in the
Pact for the Future.”
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António Guterres, United Nations Secretary-General, speaks during
the 79th session of the United Nations General Assembly, Tuesday,
Sept. 10, 2024. (AP Photo/Yuki Iwamura)
It includes 51 actions on issues including eradicating poverty,
combating climate change, achieving gender equality, promoting peace and
protecting civilians, and reinvigorating the multilateral system to
“seize the opportunities of today and tomorrow.”
Guterres pointed to “potential breakthroughs” in the pact including “the
strongest language on Security Council reform in a generation,” and the
most concrete steps to enlarging the powerful 15-member body since 1963.
He also cited the first measures to govern new technologies including
Artificial Intelligence, a “major advance” in reforming international
financial institutions, and a commitment to multiply resources for
developing countries to meet U.N. development goals by 2030.
Urging member states to get the Pact of the Future “over the finish
line,” Guterres said, “We can’t create a future fit for our
grandchildren with systems built for our grandparents.”
U.S. Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield told reporters Tuesday that a
priority for the Biden administration at this year’s Summit of the
Future is “to create a more inclusive and effective international
system.”
She said the Group of 77 which now represents 134 developing countries
at the U.N., the 27-member European Union and the United States all
agreed to the fourth revision of the Pact of the Future.
But the U.S. ambassador said Russia objected to about 15 different
issues, Saudi Arabia had problems with the climate language, and other
countries objected to the language on reforming the international
financial institutions including the World Bank and International
Monetary Fund..
“I do think the Summit of the Future will make a difference,”
Thomas-Greenfield said. “There are still some major differences. … But I
am still hopeful that we will get there.”
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