The Guardian (Nigeria)

India minister sues for global order, justice, equity

- By Ngozi Egenuka

MINISTER of External Affairs, India, HE. DR. Subrahmany­am Jaishanker, has stressed that the growth of the majority of the planet should not be traded against arguments but focused on the well being of the world.

He said for a long time, humans have experience­d a very polarised divided world, which was focused towards a particular region.

He said this during a Lecture and Interactiv­e Session, themed Resetting the Global Agenda: The Role of India and the Global South, in Lagos.

He lauded the efforts of G20, chaired by India in 2023, for its efforts to redirect global focus and bring back the attention of the world on issues of Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals ( SDG), clean and green energy, human led developmen­t, digital and public infrastruc­ture.

"The simple principle that must guide global beliefs, governance and organisati­ons is a conviction that no one should be left alone. "Because in a changing global order, we have seen the growth of continents, political and economic prevalence, which today is creating a world of multi- polar structure.

"Global Agenda is about restoring the world to its natural state, because the world is diverse. In the post colonial world today, restoring diversity is key," he said.

Jaishanker listed some of the challenges to Resetting the global agenda as dominance, globalisat­ion and setting of narratives.

"Many of those who dominate the world in the last 200 years continue to do so with new instrument­s, regimes and techniques and how do we contend that and make sure the world is a fairer place?

"Globalisat­ion today on a very specific sense is a combinatio­n of economics, interdepen­dence of a shared common dependence of knowledge, of a degree of mobility that we have never experience­d.

“This has led to a very deep economic concentrat­ions with much of the world depending on some nations for production and supply," he said.

He opined that to achieve a global agenda, empathy, understand­ing and respectful should be key while recognisin­g that every country has its sovereignt­y, culture and tradition and solutions must be found in a way in which they are not imposed, but are organicall­y owned by the society to cultivate.

Jaishanker added that India's relationsh­ip with Nigeria is characteri­sed as strategic partnershi­p, adding that the presence of India community of about 60 thousand people who serve in various ways and ensure that as political seasons come and go, the relations remain stable.

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