UN’s 75 anniversary proves to be year of great disruption

The UN’s 75th anniversary has turned out to be a year of great disruption for the world. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 24 November 2020
Follow

UN’s 75 anniversary proves to be year of great disruption

  • League of Nations’ aims of promoting peace and well-being continue to live on in the work of the United Nations
  • Crisis caused by pandemic has overshadowed many other challenges confronting the international community

DUBAI: This year marks the 75th anniversary year of the United Nations. The world has seen massive changes since the League of Nations ceased operations in 1946, just 26 years after coming into existence, but its aims of promoting peace and well-being continue to live on in the work of the UN.

The UN’s 75th anniversary, however, has turned out to be a year of great disruption for the world, compounded by a health crisis with severe economic and social consequences. The jury is out on whether humanity will emerge stronger and better equipped to work together, or if distrust and isolation will increase.

In January the UN said 2020 must be a year of dialogue, when the world came together to discuss its priorities as a human family and how it can build a better future for all. Two months later, when the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) reached pandemic proportions, the UN urged rival nations and groups to seek peace and reconciliation and to focus instead on defeating the common enemy.




Antonio Guterres, the UN secretary-general. (AFP)

The first glimmer of an end to the pandemic in the form of successful vaccine candidates coincides with a growing focus on the ways and means to build back better. “We need solidarity and cooperation. And we need concrete action now — especially for the most vulnerable,” Antonio Guterres, the UN secretary-general, said in remarks ahead of the Riyadh-hosted virtual G20 Summit, which concluded on Sunday.

Warning that the developing world is on the “precipice of financial ruin and escalating poverty, hunger and untold suffering,” he said: “We cannot let the COVID pandemic lead to a debt pandemic.”

COVID-19 has infected more than 59 million people worldwide and killed almost 1.4 million since it first emerged in China at the end of 2019. The US has seen the biggest and deadliest outbreak by far, but poorer countries have suffered to a greater extent from the economic consequences of lockdowns and disruption to trade and travel.

Like elsewhere in the world, across the Arab region, jobs have been cut, businesses have been forced to close and young people deprived of an education. Although the pandemic has accelerated digital adoption as jobs and schooling have moved online, another yawning gap between wealthy and developing nations has been exposed — digital connectivity.




Henrietta Fore, executive director of UNICEF. (AFP)

The UN wants robotics, artificial intelligence and remote platforms to help bridge this divide. A UNICEF project called Giga aims to have every school connected to the internet by 2030. “We think we can get it done and the reason is technology,” Henrietta Fore, executive director of UNICEF, told the Abu Dhabi-hosted virtual World Government Summit last month.

“We’ve got a once in a generation opportunity to reimagine education and what it could look like. As (we) gather bids so that countries around the world can have access to vaccines, we think we can do the same for connectivity,” she said. “We need private companies, governments and commitment. Global connectivity is a global public good and now’s the time to deliver it to our children.”

Working alongside the OECD and the UN’s International Telecommunication Union, Saudi Arabia hopes to lead by example in the wider region. It has made bridging the digital divide a key priority of its Vision 2030 reform strategy. In the past three years alone, the Kingdom’s fiberoptic network has been extended to 3.5 million homes, ranking it fourth globally in terms of 5G connectivity.

The same advanced technology has great potential as an equalizer that can prevent marginalized groups slipping through the cracks and prepare young people for the new industries of the future.

“The poorest populations in the poorest countries, often girls or young people with disabilities, often get left behind,” Fore told the World Government Summit. “They want a modern education so governments should think about modernizing their curriculums to give them the skills they’ll need for the future.




COVID-19 has infected more than 59 million people worldwide and killed almost 1.4 million since it first emerged in China at the end of 2019. (AFP)

“We believe that eight out of 10 young people in low and middle-income countries are going to need to make their own jobs, so they need to learn everything — how to put up solar panels, engineers, teachers, doctors, and nurses — to be able to have a livelihood.”

The World Government Summit also heard appeals for greater youth empowerment and gender equality. Before the pandemic began, it was estimated that 1.8 billion young people would enter the labor market in the next decade, of whom just 400 million would find a job.

“To build back better, we cannot leave the voices of women and youth behind,” Maria Fernanda Espinosa Garces, the current president of the UN General Assembly, said. “We need to craft a world that is more sustainable and more resilient, free from inequalities and injustice.”

In her opinion, with women comprising half the world’s population, their absence in decision-making processes and agreements harms the overall effort to secure peace, human rights and sustainable development.

“Gender equality is a strong predictor of a state’s peacefulness and development,” Espinosa Garces said. “We have proven that where women are more empowered, a state is less likely to experience civil conflict or go to war. It is clear that women are agents of transformation, of building back better a world for all.”

Incidentally, countries in the Arab region have made significant strides on this issue in recent years, with Saudi Arabia’s economy making the most progress globally towards gender equality since 2017, according to a recent World Bank report.




Maria Fernanda Espinosa Garces, the current president of the UN General Assembly. (AFP)

“When you look at COVID-19, 70 percent of the front-liners fighting this pandemic are women,” Ohood Al-Roumi, the UAE minister of state for government development and the future, said at the World Government Summit.

“Countries who have more women in government senior leadership positions had better responses to the pandemic overall. Yet women are about 39 percent of the global workforce in the world and they occupy only 28 percent of managerial positions.”

Today, half the UAE’s Parliament is made up of women, compared to the global average of 25 percent. Women constitute two-thirds of university graduates and government employees, and one third of its cabinet ministers are women in senior posts.

“More needs to be done around the world to enable and support more women to take more public leadership positions,” said Al-Roumi. “To create a better world, the future is female.”

On the bright side, Guterres said ahead of the G20 Summit that a global coalition for net zero carbon emissions by 2050 is taking shape, amid concerns over the continued rise of greenhouse gas emissions at a rate of 1.5 percent annually.




This year’s Riyadh-hosted virtual G20 Summit concluded on Sunday. (Reuters)

He called on G20 countries to put a price on carbon, end fossil fuel subsidies, stop construction of new coal power plants, ensure mandatory financial reporting on exposure to climate risks and integrate the goal of carbon neutrality into all economic and fiscal policies and decisions.

In her remarks at the World Government Summit, Espinosa Garces too said the pandemic had presented opportunities to make the global economy “greener.”

“We can and must do more,” she said. “Building back better has to mean decarbonizing our economy, to rethink our production and consumption patterns. The recovery from COVID-19 shouldn’t just encompass ‘green’ jobs and recovery plans but also a commitment to building stronger, rejuvenated global institutions.”

Twitter: @CalineMalek


Dutch police end a pro-Palestinian demonstration at Amsterdam university

Updated 21 sec ago
Follow

Dutch police end a pro-Palestinian demonstration at Amsterdam university

AMSTERDAM: Dutch riot police ended a pro-Palestinian demonstration at an Amsterdam university early on Tuesday, arresting some 125 people in sometimes violent clashes, authorities said.
In messages posted overnight on social media X, police said they had to act to stop the event and dismantle tents that been set up by protesters, who used violence against police at the site.
“The police’s input was necessary to restore order. We see the footage on social media. We understand that those images may appear as intense,” police said.
Local media showed demonstrators shooting fireworks at police officers but there were no immediate reports of injuries on either side.
“All is now quiet ... police stay in the vicinity of the Roeterseiland campus,” police said later on X.
Outgoing Education minister Robbert Dijkgraaf said universities are a place for dialogue and debate and he was sad to see that police had to intervene.
Student protests over the war and academic ties with Israel have begun to spread across Europe but have remained much smaller in scale than those seen in the United States.
Last Friday, police in Paris entered France’s prestigious Sciences Po university and removed student activists who had occupied its buildings.
More than 100 students occupy the Ghent university, in Belgium, in both a climate and a Gaza protest that they want to prolong until Wednesday.

India election: Inside Modi and BJP’s plan to win a supermajority

Updated 4 min 45 sec ago
Follow

India election: Inside Modi and BJP’s plan to win a supermajority

  • Hindu nationalist BJP party and its allies are targeting 400 of 543 seats in India’s lower house of parliament
  • Only once has a party crossed 400 mark, when Congress won following assassination of Indira Gandhi in 1984

BARPETA/THIRUVANANTHAPURAM, India: As India votes in a six-week general election, Narendra Modi’s image adorns everything from packs of rice handed out to the poor to large posters in cities and towns.

His Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) is relying on the prime minister’s popularity as it seeks a super-majority in India’s parliament. Its message: Modi has delivered economic growth, infrastructure upgrades and India’s improved standing in the world.

But as the Hindu nationalist party and its allies target 400 of the 543 seats in India’s lower house of parliament — up from 352 won in 2019 — they are also employing local tactics in some vital constituencies they hope to wrest from the opposition.

Opinion polls indicate Modi will win a rare third term when voting ends on June 1. But only once in Indian history has a party crossed the 400 mark — when the center-left Congress party romped to victory following the assassination of its leader Indira Gandhi in 1984.

To examine how the right-wing National Democratic Alliance (NDA) aims to achieve that feat — and the obstacles it faces — Reuters spoke to nine NDA officials, three opposition leaders and two political analysts, as well as voters in six opposition-held seats the alliance is targeting.

They identified three of the BJP’s key tactics: enlisting celebrity candidates to unseat veteran opposition lawmakers; making an assault on the opposition’s southern strongholds by appealing to minorities such as Christians; and exploiting redrawn political boundaries that bolster the Hindu electorate in some opposition-controlled areas in the north.

“A combination of strategies, organizational commitment and tactical flexibility will help make inroads in seats never held by the party ever before,” BJP President J. P. Nadda, who oversees the party’s election strategy, told Reuters in April.

Some critics have warned the BJP would use a large majority to push through a more radical agenda in a third term. While the BJP’s manifesto focuses heavily on economic growth, it has also pledged to scrap separate legal codes for religious and tribal groups in areas such as marriage and inheritance.

Many Muslims and tribal groups oppose the plan, which would require a constitutional amendment to be passed by at least two-thirds of parliament.

“Modi wants a landslide majority only to be able to end the debate and deliberation on any policy matter in the parliament,” Congress party president Mallikarjun Kharge told Reuters.

Following low turnout in early voting, some BJP campaign officials have in recent days appeared less confident of securing a huge majority, though the party still expects to form the next government.

SOUTHERN STRATEGY

Modi’s party has criticized the dynastic politics that it says afflicts Congress, long dominated by the Nehru-Gandhi family. But in Pathanamthitta, a seat in the southern state of Kerala, it is fielding a political scion in Anil Antony — son of a veteran Congress leader.

The constituency, home to a sizeable Christian minority, has been held by Congress since its creation in 2009.

Anil’s father, former defense minister A.K. Antony, supports the incumbent and has denounced his son, a fellow Christian, for representing the Hindu nationalist party.

But Anil has another supporter: Modi, who came to Pathanamthitta in March and praised the BJP candidate for his “fresh vision and leadership.” The prime minister has visited the five states of southern India at least 16 times since December.

Nadda, the BJP president, acknowledged that winning a supermajority would require performing well in the five southern states, which are home to about 20 percent of India’s population but have not traditionally voted for his party.

In 2019, the NDA won just 31 of 130 seats across Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Kerala, Tamil Nadu and Telangana, all of which are linguistically diverse and have many Muslim and Christian voters.

Jiji Joseph, general secretary of the BJP’s minority wing in Kerala, said the party has made a concerted push for the 18 percent of voters there who are Christians. The BJP did not win a single seat in Kerala at the last general election.

“The BJP launched active contact with the Church and we started interacting with clergies directly,” he said, adding that the party now has 11,000 active Christian members. “There is a change. Christians now want to believe that BJP stands for them.”

In April, Anil became the first BJP candidate in Kerala to be endorsed by Christian leaders. He told Reuters his selection indicated the party offered opportunities to members from minority groups. He declined to comment on relations with his father.

Jayant Joseph, a Keralan Christian voter, said he backed the BJP because he had read media reports about Muslim men marrying Christian women and converting them to Islam. Most moderate Hindus consider allegations of large-scale forced conversions to be a conspiracy theory.

“Kerala is a secular state,” he said. “But for it to continue to be a secular state, the Muslim population and their conversion strategy must be kept under check.”

A Modi political aide, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to media, said the NDA expects to win about 50 seats in the south.

K. Anil Kumar, a senior leader of Kerala’s ruling Communist Party of India (Marxist), said he did not believe BJP would do well in his state, which he said has a strong tradition of secularism.

“The BJP might try to side with the Christians on some issues but they are fundamentally a party of the Hindus and for the Hindus,” he said.

STAR CANDIDATES

In the Mandi constituency of the northern state of Himachal Pradesh, the BJP has recruited Bollywood actress Kangana Ranaut to break the Congress party’s grip on power. Congress is fielding as its candidate Vikramaditya Singh, whose mother currently represents the constituency. His father was the state’s long-time chief minister.

Ranaut, a political novice who calls herself a “glorious right-wing” personality, has starred in popular movies with nationalistic themes. She is known for her criticism of Bollywood executives who she said favored the relatives of famous actors for opportunities.

The actress is one of five actors running for the BJP this year, up from four in 2019.

No opinion polling on the Mandi race is publicly available.

Anjana Negia, an elementary school teacher who plans to vote for Ranaut, acknowledged that her preferred candidate had no political experience. But she said that she valued a new face and that a Modi-backed candidate would help “bring a fresh wave of development.”

Fielding celebrities and seeking the endorsement of entertainment personalities is relatively new for the BJP, which “long resisted such tactics because of its cadre-based nature” that prized grassroots efforts, said Milan Vaishnav, an expert on South Asian politics at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace think-tank.

Ranaut declined an interview request. Federal BJP spokesman Shahzad Poonawala said she “has been successful in exposing dynastic culture and nepotism in Bollywood and now she is doing the same in politics.”

Singh, a state minister responsible for urban development, told Reuters that his family’s experiences gave him a better understanding of politics. Charges of nepotism were “shallow,” he said.

REDISTRICTING BENEFITS

The NDA is hoping for gains in the northeastern state of Assam, where it won nine of 14 seats in 2019. Assam’s BJP chief minister, Himanta Biswa Sarma, said in March he was confident of winning 13 seats.

The NDA’s confidence is rooted in a 2023 redistricting exercise in the state. India’s non-partisan Election Commission routinely redraws seat boundaries to reflect population changes; it is tasked with ensuring that no political party gains undue advantage from the changes.

But exercises since the last federal election in Assam and far-northern Jammu and Kashmir, India’s only majority Muslim region, diluted the Muslim vote in seats that the NDA is targeting, according to three BJP and four opposition officials.

The Election Commission declined to comment on the two exercises, citing the ongoing election.

In Assam, the NDA has high hopes for Congress-held Barpeta, which alliance candidate Phani Bhushan Choudhury said newly includes dozens of villages and some towns with large Hindu populations.

“Earlier (Barpeta) had a Muslim majority but now it is a Hindu majority,” said Choudhury. “That change has worked in my favor.”

He estimates that there are now 1.2 million Hindu voters in Barpeta, where he is campaigning on development and protecting the rights of what the NDA calls “indigenous Assamese” voters, who are mostly Hindu.

Choudhury’s Congress opponent Deep Bayan said the percentage of Hindus in Barpeta went from 30 percent to 70 percent. “Instead focusing on real issues affecting the people...(the BJP does) the politics of polarization,” he said.

Three of Jammu and Kashmir’s five seats are majority Muslim and held by the opposition. But the NDA hopes to swing one of them, Anantnag-Rajouri, after its voter rolls swelled by more than 50 percent to over 2 million, according to government data.

Many of the new voters are Hindus or from regional tribes — which benefited from new BJP policies awarding them education and employment privileges — according to regional BJP chief Ravinder Raina.

Raina said the BJP would support an NDA partner that it believed could win Anantnag-Rajouri and focus on retaining the two Hindu-majority seats it holds.

The two redistricting exercises presages a broader remapping of constituencies due after the election.

Vaishnav, of the Carnegie Endowment, said the remapping would distribute seats to the BJP-dominated north, which has much higher population growth rates, to the detriment of wealthier south India.


Indian PM Modi says he does not oppose Islam, Muslims as election campaign heats up

Updated 10 min 55 sec ago
Follow

Indian PM Modi says he does not oppose Islam, Muslims as election campaign heats up

  • Modi’s critics accuse him and his party of targeting India’s minority Muslims for electoral gains
  • Allegations grew after Modi referred to Muslims recently as “infiltrators” who have “more children”

NEW DELHI: Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has said he does not oppose Islam or Muslims and wants the community to think about their future growth as they vote in an ongoing general election that completes its third phase on Tuesday.

Modi’s critics accuse him and his party of targeting minority Muslims for electoral gains and the allegations grew after Modi referred to Muslims in a recent speech as “infiltrators” who have “more children.”

He denied discriminating against Muslims and has linked his recent comment to what he described as the opposition Congress party’s election plan to redistribute the wealth of majority Hindus among Muslims. The Congress denies making any such promise.

“We are not opposed to Islam and Muslims,” Modi told broadcaster Times Now in an interview aired on Monday. “The opposition is looking after its own benefit. Muslim community is intelligent... the opposition is worried that their lies have been caught.”

Modi is seeking a rare third straight term in the seven-phase election that started on April 19 and ends on June 1. Eleven states and territories will vote in the third phase on Tuesday and surveys suggest Modi will win comfortably when results are declared on June 4.

His campaign began by showcasing economic achievements of the past 10 years but changed tack after the first phase of voting and focused more on firing up his Bharatiya Janata Party’s Hindu base by attacking rivals as pro-Muslim.

“I want to say to the Muslim community: introspect, think. The country’s progressing, if you feel any shortcomings in your community, what is the reason behind it? Why didn’t you get government benefits in the time when Congress was in power?“

Analysts say Modi and his Hindu nationalist party have made controversial remarks to invigorate their hard-line base as the election sees comparatively low voter turnout from previous years. Surveys say jobs and inflation are the main concerns of voters.

“Think of your children and your own future,” Modi said, referring to Muslims and the elections. “I don’t want any community to live like laborers because someone is scaring them.”


PM Modi votes as India’s marathon election heats up

Updated 07 May 2024
Follow

PM Modi votes as India’s marathon election heats up

  • Modi’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party is expected to win India’s election convincingly
  • Indian PM has stepped up rhetoric on India’s main religious divide in bid to rally voters

AHMEDABAD, India: Hindu nationalist Prime Minister Narendra Modi cast his ballot Tuesday in India’s ongoing general election after giving several inflammatory campaign speeches accused of targeting minority Muslims.

Turnout so far has dropped significantly compared with the last national poll in 2019, with analysts blaming widespread expectations that Modi will easily win a third term and hotter-than-average temperatures heading into the summer.

Modi walked out of a polling booth early morning in the city of Ahmedabad while holding up a finger marked with indelible ink, flanked by security personnel and cheered by supporters.

“Voted in the 2024 Lok Sabha elections,” Modi said on social media platform X, referring to India’s lower house of parliament.

“Urging everyone to do so as well and strengthen our democracy.”

The premier’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) is expected to win the election convincingly, but since the vote began on April 19, Modi has stepped up his rhetoric on India’s main religious divide in a bid to rally voters.

He has used public speeches to refer to Muslims as “infiltrators” and “those who have more children,” prompting condemnation from opposition politicians, who have complained to election authorities.

Modi has also accused Congress, the main party in the disparate opposition alliance competing against him, of planning to reallocate the nation’s wealth to Muslim households.

“This is the first time in a long time that he is so direct,” said Hartosh Singh Bal, executive editor at news magazine The Caravan.

“I haven’t seen him be this directly bigoted, usually he alludes to bigotry,” he added.

“The comments on wealth redistribution are targeting something from the Congress manifesto that just does not exist and that is frankly quite unfortunate.”

Modi remains widely popular a decade after coming to power, in large part due to his government’s positioning the nation’s majority faith at the center of its politics, despite India’s officially secular constitution.

In January, the prime minister presided over the inauguration of a grand temple to the deity Ram, built on the site of a centuries-old mosque razed by Hindu zealots decades earlier.

Construction of the temple fulfilled a long-standing demand of Hindu activists and was widely celebrated across India, with extensive television coverage and street parties.

Modi’s brand of Hindu-nationalist politics has in turn made India’s 220-million-plus Muslim population increasingly anxious about their future in the country.

The election commission has not sanctioned Modi for his remarks despite its code of conduct prohibiting campaigning on “communal feelings” such as religion.

India’s election is conducted in seven phases over six weeks to ease the immense logistical burden of staging the democratic exercise in the world’s most populous country.

Much of southern Asia was hit by a heatwave last week that saw several constituencies vote in searing temperatures.

In the city of Mathura, not far from the Taj Mahal, temperatures crossed 41 degrees Celsius (106 degrees Fahrenheit) on polling day, and election commission figures showed turnout dropping nearly nine points to 52 percent from five years earlier.

An analysis of turnout data published by The Hindu newspaper concluded it was too early to determine whether hot weather was impacting voter participation.

But India’s weather bureau has forecast more heatwave spells to come in May and the election commission formed a taskforce last month to review the impact of heat and humidity before each round of voting.

High temperatures were forecast for several locations voting on Tuesday including the states of Madhya Pradesh and Bihar.

Years of scientific research have found climate change is causing heatwaves to become longer, more frequent and more intense.

More than 968 million people are eligible to vote in the Indian election, with the final round of polling on June 1 and results expected three days later.


Ground invasion of Rafah would be ‘intolerable,’ UN chief warns

Updated 07 May 2024
Follow

Ground invasion of Rafah would be ‘intolerable,’ UN chief warns

  • Israel has killed more than 34,700 Palestinians, around two-thirds of them children and women, according to Gaza health officials

UNITED NATIONS, United States: A ground invasion of Rafah would be “intolerable,” UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said Monday, calling on Israel and Hamas “to go an extra mile” to reach a ceasefire deal.
“This is an opportunity that cannot be missed, and a ground invasion in Rafah would be intolerable because of its devastating humanitarian consequences, and because of its destabilizing impact in the region,” Guterres said as he received Italian President Sergio Mattarella.