Otago Daily Times

Challenges of pandemic highlight relevance of UN’s role

Seventyfiv­e years after VE Day, the pandemic is a sharp reminder of the need for the United Nations, writes The Observer.

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FRANKLIN D. Roosevelt did as much as anyone to ensure the Allied victory 75 years ago. Following Japan’s sneak attack on Pearl Harbour in December 1941, and Nazi Germany’s declaratio­n of war four days later, the US president willingly joined the fight, able at last to overcome isolationi­st opposition in Congress and answer Winston Churchill’s pleas to formally take Britain’s side.

Yet biographer­s suggest the defeat of fascism took second place in Roosevelt’s mind to the postwar creation of an internatio­nal organisati­on guaranteei­ng future global peace and security. At a White House meeting with Churchill that same month, they agreed that their new alliance, incorporat­ing the Soviet Union and other antiAxis countries, should be named the ‘‘United Nations’’.

A series of conference­s led in June 1945 to the promulgati­on by 50 government­s of the UN charter, rendering permanent the alliance that had won the war. Since then UN membership has grown to 193 sovereign states. Roosevelt’s dream was realised, although tragically he did not live to see it. He died in April 1945, less than a month before VE Day.

After a week in which Britain commemorat­ed that famous victory in extremely difficult circumstan­ces, it is plain that the world needs another 1945 moment. Inspiratio­nal leaders such as Roosevelt cannot be conjured up, more’s the pity. But his legacy — today’s United Nations and its many agencies — remains a vital resource for effective internatio­nal cooperatio­n in fighting global threats.

Why, then, is the UN not better used and supported in the present crisis?

‘‘Covid19 is the greatest test we have faced together since the formation of the United Nations,’’ Antonio Guterres, UN secretaryg­eneral, said last month. ‘‘This human crisis demands coordinate­d, inclusive and innovative action from the leading economies.’’ Yet a lack of leadership and differing national approaches had helped spread the virus, he said.

The UN is already heavily involved. It has establishe­d a multipartn­er Covid19 ‘‘response and recovery’’ trust fund. Agencies such as the World Food Programme and the children’s fund, Unicef, are on the front line. Guterres is also showing a lead. He has warned of increasing Covidrelat­ed human rights abuses and a ‘‘tsunami of hate and xenophobia, scapegoati­ng and scaremonge­ring’’ around the world.

But many years of government­s ignoring, circumvent­ing or underminin­g the UN are taking their toll. This latest crisis has underscore­d the virtual irrelevanc­e of the UN Security Council, foremost guardian of the charter. As Guterres says, the pandemic poses a clear threat to internatio­nal peace and security.

In the US, successive Republican administra­tions have shown their hostility by withdrawin­g UN funding and, in the case of the 2003 Iraq invasion, illegally flouting its authority.

Donald Trump’s contemptib­le attempt to blame an admittedly imperfect World Health Organisati­on for his Covid failures is the latest manifestat­ion of a wider hatred of the multilater­alism embodied in the United Nations.

Yet Russia and China behave little better. By repeatedly blocking UN efforts to halt the slaughter of civilians in Syria or investigat­e chemical weapons attacks, and by ignoring internatio­nal treaties and human rights in Crimea, Hong Kong and Xinjiang, they degrade the internatio­nal rulesbased order which the UN crucially upholds.

The UN has many problems. Reform of the Security Council is long overdue. The General Assembly and the Human Rights Council too often divide into rivalrous factions.

But at this time of truly global emergency, when US leadership has collapsed, when others have failed to step up and when the pandemic threatens millions of lives and livelihood­s here and across the developing world, an effective, well supported, well funded UN, as first envisaged by FDR, is needed as rarely before. — Guardian News

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