Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

UN's "hollow" ring for SDGs worldwide

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United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon on Friday spoke in Colombo under the auspices of the Lakshman Kadirgamar Institute for Internatio­nal Relations and Strategic Studies (LKIIRSS) on the topic of “Sustaining Peace and Achieving Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals.” He referred to the many Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs) of the UN, but clearly went off track to compare what happened in Sri Lanka with what happened in Rwanda --which raised some eye-brows and asked the Government to reduce its military strength in the North ; something he would dare not ask the West to do in West Asia.

Only a few weeks earlier, the Norwegian Prime Minister delivering the Lakshman Kadirgamar 2016 memorial lecture spoke on the same SDG theme. Ms. Ema Solberg referred to the importance of the 17 SDGs as the UN’s plan of action for people, peace, prosperity, partnershi­p and the planet – the five Ps. Though Mr. Ban made no reference to areas of the SDGs in which Sri Lanka has made vast strides, Ms. Solberg praised Sri Lanka for achieving at least some of these goals. For instance, accessibil­ity to health and education for both males and females has long been achieved in Sri Lanka. Instead, the UNSG made the startling remark that Sri Lanka needed to regain its rightful place in the region and the internatio­nal community. The local media wanted to grill him on this at a media conference he held later, but his media boys called the presser off after just four questions were asked.

SDG 5 on gender equality; SDG 7 on affordable and clean energy; SDG 13 on climate change; SDG 14 on conservati­on of the oceans: SDG 16 on peace and justice – these are some of the UN’s priorities for a better world. These SDGs are a bi-product of the UN’s Millennium Developmen­t Goals (MDGs) that did not meet their full potential by their target date in 2015. The SDGs now target 2030 but the UN’s call for internatio­nal co-operation in achieving these goals unfortunat­ely fall flat when bigger nations simply ignore them for their “national interest.” For example, take the rape of the marine resources in the Palk Strait and the Gulf of Mannar by Indian fishermen. It’s a classic instance of the world community, including the UN maintainin­g a deafening silence when the big nations are in the wrong.

“The 17 SDGs are inter-connected and many of them require cooperatio­n across internatio­nal borders – that means we will fail or succeed together,” said the Norwegian PM, Co-chair of the UN SDGs advisory group. “In many areas, business as usual will not do,” she added for good measure and referred to her country cooperatin­g in fisheries (SDG 14 deals with the sustainabl­e use of marine resources).

But look at the sheer hypocrisy in internatio­nal cooperatio­n. The illegal, fishing practices (IUU) adopted by the Indians continue unabated, filling the Treasury coffers of the Tamil Nadu state Government and lining the pockets of the state’s businessme­n or politician­s with exports to the European Union (EU). In the meantime, the EU takes a holistic view on Illegal, Unreported and Unregulate­d (IUU) practices against Sri Lankan fishermen and red cards imports from Sri Lanka. It preaches and has its plate full at the same time.

This is why the UN’s otherwise noble goals are often unachievab­le and of mere academic interest to countries that need its help most. These SDGs refer to children needing schools and childbirth issues, poverty and health, when countries like Syria and much of West Asia, Yemen and parts of Africa are living hells due to wars triggered by the West’s agenda. Tax havens overseas, especially in the West, allow corrupt politician­s and third-world tax dodgers who have creamed the fat off their land to stack their loot in their banks and bolster their economies. The UN has been widely blamed for ‘standing and watching’, doing little or nothing while talking of MDGs and SDGs.

While Sri Lanka’s public and private sector embrace the UN’s SDGs, even the UNSG Ban-Ki moon conceded how “hollow” the UN’s grandiloqu­ence can be when the world is at war. And of course, so too, as long as double standards of the West dominate the world order.

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