Lethbridge Herald

Trudeau, allies call for unity on pandemic

More than 50 UN members meet via video conference

- Mike Blanchfiel­d and Joan Bryden THE CANADIAN PRESS – OTTAWA

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau led a united call for global co-operation at a major United Nations meeting Thursday aimed at mitigating the devastatin­g social and economic impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic.

And UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres tacitly endorsed Canada’s ability to convene larger groups of countries to serve the greater internatio­nal good — a key plank in Canada’s platform for a temporary seat on the Security Council.

The COVID-19 conference came as Canada is competing for one of two non-permanent seats on the Security Council next month against Norway and Ireland. Canada is running on a platform of trying to help rebuild the post-pandemic world, and Trudeau said Thursday’s video conference of more than 50 heads of state and government was an example.

Trudeau said the conference was the result of ongoing work with his conference co-host, Jamaican Prime Minister Andrew Holness, to mitigate the effects of climate change.

“Canada has a long tradition of convening, of gathering people together to deal with larger issues and this is certainly a role we hope to play on the UN Security Council,” Trudeau said.

“We demonstrat­ed (that) today on an issue we’ve been working on over the past five years in terms of developmen­t, financing and improving economic flows to countries in need. This is something that we can gather critical masses of consensus around the world.”

Trudeau said Canada, potentiall­y as one of 10 rotating non-permanent members of the council, could help find common ground with its five veto-wielding permanent members who have been deadlocked for years on many issues, notably the carnage in Syria.

“I, of course, agree with the prime minister. I have never seen the council work being paralyzed by elected members,” Guterres said.

Trudeau, Guterres and Holness began the hours-long videoconfe­rence by affirming support for the internatio­nal institutio­ns that need to lead the recovery.

“Our citizens need to have confidence in internatio­nal institutio­ns that leave no one behind and are capable of overcoming global challenges,” Trudeau said in opening remarks

Remarks by dozens of heads of state and government followed, including Germany’s Angela Merkel, France’s Emmanuel Macron, and Britain’s Boris Johnson, along with representa­tives of the World Bank, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and the private sector.

U.S. President Donald Trump was noticeably absent as was China’s Xi Jinping. Trump has argued that wise leaders put the interests of their own countries first.

Guterres said the U.S. and China would support the various committees that were created in Thursday’s meeting to report back to him by July on the financial recovery.

One by one, Merkel, Macron, Johnson — among others — thrashed Trump’s go-it-alone approach without mentioning his name.

Merkel reminded the gathering that Germany has trumpeted climate change during its past G7 presidency. Trump is hosting the G7 summit this year.

European Commission

President Ursula von der Leyen noted the pandemic might push some countries to focus on their own needs.

“This is wrong. We have to work together, and for each other.”

Macron, who has never shied away from criticizin­g Trump, said the “collective action” of the world’s multilater­al system is crucial.

“No single country can find a solution to this crisis. There can be no isolated solution. We have to address issues collective­ly, such as health, the environmen­t, justice.”

Johnson, sometimes viewed as a kindred political spirit of Trump’s, piled on.

“No single country hold the keys to victory against our invisible enemy,” he said. “If we are to defeat COVID-19, achieve a global recovery, and avoid a future pandemic, then we must work together across borders.”

Ireland and Norway, Canada’s rivals for the two temporary seats on the security council, echoed the sentiment.

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