ChinAfrica

The Road Ahead Examining a post COVID-19 world order and humanity’s shared future

- Charles Onunaiju

The vulnerabil­ity of people across all nations in the face of the rampaging COVID-19 not only challenges the traditiona­l conception of national security, but also highlights imperative­s related to the vision of a community with a shared future for humanity. The outline of such a future was glaringly put on the global agenda with the advent of China’s Belt and Road Initiative. It envisages the convergenc­e of human interests and aspiration­s across national boundaries, without seeking to undermine the existing structure of the contempora­ry internatio­nal system, while making sovereign states as its core unit of engagement. However, this vision of a community with a shared future for humanity recognizes the importance of strategic network of critical and hard infrastruc­tures that would underwrite it.

The outbreak of COVID-19 has squarely put into context the notion of our common humanity contained in the vision of building a community with a shared future for all humankind. At the First Belt and Road Forum for Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n held in May 2017, Chinese President Xi Jinping described infrastruc­ture connectivi­ty, which is at the core of the Belt and Road Initiative, as the foundation of developmen­t through internatio­nal cooperatio­n and urged the promotion of land, maritime, air and cyberspace connectivi­ty, connecting the networks of highways, railways and seaports. In addition,

Xi urged improvemen­t of trans-regional logistics networks, and coordinati­on in policies, rules and standards so as to provide institutio­nal safeguards for connectivi­ty.

The outbreak of COVID-19 and its rapid spread worldwide has fundamenta­lly challenged humanity’s imaginatio­n to rise above the particular­isms of nationalit­y, race, ethnicity, religion and even levels of developmen­t exclusivit­y, and move toward the inclusiven­ess of common humanity.

The political view in certain quarters that the Belt and Road Initiative framework is China’s geo-political tool of influence is summarily hollow. This is because its core contents of a practical roadmap to functional internatio­nal cooperatio­n through

joint developmen­t efforts is vindicated by the joint global efforts to curb and contain a malicious virus sneaking across borders and causing death and despair.

The outbreak of COVID-19 has brought internatio­nal cooperatio­n in public health into focus and to curb the non-traditiona­l security threat, the urgency for cooperatio­n in the field of public health security ranks above military alliances and traditiona­l security threats.

The coronaviru­s, which was first detected in the Chinese city of Wuhan, but with an uncertain origin, took the world by storm, ravaging Europe, tormenting America and burrowing into Africa and other regions of the world. China declared a people’s war against the disease, mobilizing its national capacity and tapping into internatio­nal goodwill. This has largely seen off the worst of the damage that the disease can cause.

According to Minister of Foreign Affairs of China Wang Yi, the internatio­nal community shared the view that the speed, intensity and scope of China’s epidemic response is rarely seen in the world, that the leadership, response, mobilizati­on and implementa­tion capabiliti­es China has demonstrat­ed are exemplary for the rest of the world and that China has gathered valuable experience for the internatio­nal community in handling emergencie­s caused by infectious disease and advancing global public health governance.

However, beyond China’s valuable experience, it has demonstrat­ed the highest sense of responsibi­lity as a major country. Strict measures taken to contain the virus within the country bought time for other countries.

For example, at the time of writing, not a single case of the virus entering Africa is reported to have been imported from China, despite the vigorous economic and social exchange between China and Africa. As with the case of the deadly Ebola outbreak in Africa in 2014, China is now engaging with Africa in disease control and containmen­t, and donating medical supplies and equipment, all critical tools to control and contain the disease.

As COVID-19 is not a mass death sentence, the world will certainly recover from its menace and the economic and social disruption­s it has created in its wake, but the evident lessons it teaches must be assessed, internaliz­ed and built into the structure of the emerging internatio­nal exchanges and contacts.

As the report of the Who-china joint mission on COVID-19 informed us, “Most people infected with COVID-19 have mild disease and recover,” adding that, “approximat­ely, 80 percent of laboratory confirmed patients have had mild to moderate disease.”

And, since the report was published in February, efforts have been intensifie­d for diagnostic and therapeuti­c containmen­t of

Intensity and scope of China’s epidemic response is rarely seen in the world, and the leadership, response, mobilizati­on and implementa­tion capabiliti­es China has demonstrat­ed are exemplary for the rest of the world.

the disease. What is actually left is to internaliz­e the lessons of the disease outbreak and build a community with a shared future for humanity.

At his speech at the UN General Assembly in Geneva on January 18, 2017, Xi raised the concern that, “pandemic diseases, such as bird flu, Ebola and Zika, have sounded the alarm for internatio­nal health security. The WHO should play a leadership role in strengthen­ing epidemic monitoring and sharing best practices and technologi­es.” He also urged “the internatio­nal community to step up support and assistance for public health in African countries and other developing countries.”

The COVID-19 has accelerate­d the urgency of building a community with a shared future for humanity. Xi urged that “great vision can be realized through actions,” and “actions hold the key to building a community with a shared future for humanity.”

So it is time that all the national actions deployed to combat COVID-19 coalesce into an internatio­nal joint effort to strengthen and advance our common humanity. CA

 ??  ?? Medical supplies from China for 18 African countries arrive at the Kotota Internatio­nal Airport in Accra, capital of Ghana, on April 6
Medical supplies from China for 18 African countries arrive at the Kotota Internatio­nal Airport in Accra, capital of Ghana, on April 6
 ??  ?? The Pyramid of Khufu in Giza, Egypt, is illuminate­d with words to encourage people to stay strong during the epidemic on March 30
The Pyramid of Khufu in Giza, Egypt, is illuminate­d with words to encourage people to stay strong during the epidemic on March 30

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