The Guardian (Charlottetown)

‘Unless there’s a global vaccine, nobody’s really safe’

Symons Medal recipient Bob Rae says global vaccine access is in Canada’s interest

- STU NEATBY POLITICAL REPORTER stu.neatby@theguardia­n.pe.ca @stu_neatby

Bob Rae, Canada’s permanent representa­tive to the United Nations, believes this is no time for isolationi­sm.

The former premier of Ontario says Canada has a unique opportunit­y to ensure that a COVID-19 vaccine, once it is available, is equitably offered and distribute­d to poorer countries. And it is global organizati­ons like the World Health Organizati­on, and the UN that are singularly equipped to make this happen.

"Unless there's a global vaccine, nobody's really safe,” Rae told The Guardian in a phone interview from New York.

“If you've got major centres that are going to continue to have major outbreaks, that affects everything. It affects the global economy, it affects people's ability to travel and it means that the virus is never gone unless it's gone everywhere."

Rae is this year’s recipient of the Symons Medal, granted yearly by P.E.I.’s Confederat­ion Centre of the Arts to an individual who has made an extraordin­ary contributi­on to Canadian life.

Like past recipients of the Symons Medal, such as Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and former Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission chairman Murray Sinclair, Rae will be delivering a high-profile lecture at the Confederat­ion Centre. Like in past years, the lecture will be introduced by P.E.I.’s Premier Dennis King.

Unlike in previous years, however, Rae will not be physically present at the lecture. It will be broadcast to a live audience via Zoom, followed by a question and answer session.

"I'm really sorry that I can't be there in person,” Rae said.

“I have a lot of friends on the Island."

Rae’s lecture is entitled "Learning from The Past, Imagining the Future: Reflection­s from a Political Life." The focus is upon the “twin moments,” as he puts it, of the formation of Confederat­ion in 1867 and of the 1945 postwar formation of the United Nations.

“It's a speech about how, at a certain critical point in our history as Canadians, we

decided to create a country. And, at a critical point in the world in 1945, we decided to create the United Nations,” Rae said.

Rae added that neither 1867 nor 1945 were “perfect or completely inclusive,” a nod to last year’s lecture by Murray Sinclair.

Since being appointed to his current role in July, Rae has been carrying out his duties without travel, conducting meetings and negotiatio­ns via video chat due to the pandemic.

“That makes diplomacy difficult,” Rae said of the absence of in-person meetings.

“There’s not much room for corridor conversati­ons and pulling people aside and really trying to see what movement is possible.”

Rae believes the current global COVID-19 recession poses a significan­t threat to the internatio­nal community’s ability to meet the climate targets set out in the Paris Climate Agreement.

“We have to embrace the need for more investment in sustainabl­e developmen­t as the key to emerging from the dark night of COVID-19,” he said.

Rae has argued that Canada could start by meeting the goal, set out by Lester Pearson in 1969, of providing the equivalent of 0.7 per cent of Canada’s Gross National Income to overseas aid. Canada has never met this target.

In a recent report, Rae also singled out Haiti as a region Canada “should continue to support.”

Last week saw the 10-year anniversar­y of a cholera epidemic that killed nearly 10,000 people in that country. The UN admitted in 2016 the outbreak was introduced by its own peacekeepe­rs but has failed to offer compensati­on to family members of victims.

Rae said he believes the UN should offer some compensati­on for the Cholera outbreak.

“You have to be upfront about finding ways of providing people with compensati­on. You can’t have a full-blown reconcilia­tion of this situation until that happens,” he said.

This is easier said than done. The UN lacks the ability to borrow money for a large-scale compensati­on scheme, Rae said.

“The UN as an organizati­on operates on a cash-flow basis. The challenge will be to figure out how to deal with the practicali­ties of how it should be done,” Rae said.

The Symons Lecture will stream live and online on Friday at 8 p.m.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Bob Rae, Canada’s Ambassador to the United Nations, is this year’s recipient of the Symons Medal.
CONTRIBUTE­D Bob Rae, Canada’s Ambassador to the United Nations, is this year’s recipient of the Symons Medal.

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