Bangkok Post

UNSC must address pandemic

- TAN SRI HASMY AGAM ANIS H BAJREKTARE­VIC

The Covid-19 situation is a very worrying, indeed, alarming matter, not just as a global health and biosafety issue, but potentiall­y as a global security challenge, too. While the pandemic is being dealt with by the World Health Organisati­on (WHO), along with other relevant United Nation Specialise­d Agencies, the situation is deteriorat­ing rapidly and could easily get out of control. This is of course, if it is not effectivel­y contained. In such a (more and more likely) scenario, it could engulf the entire world, with the effects and impacts akin to those of a third world war, though initially of a different kind.

We are amazed that the UN Security Council (UNSC) has not stepped in. It should have done so as to address the Covid-19 and surroundin­g situation in the way it clearly deserves to be dealt with, given its devastatin­g impact on the entire internatio­nal community in almost every dimension, including internatio­nal peace and security, which indisputab­ly falls under its mandate under the UN Charter.

As the council has often dealt with issues which are sometimes not ostensibly related to internatio­nal or regional security, and of much less importance or urgency than this dreadful pandemic, we are puzzled, indeed alarmed, as to why it has chosen not to come to grips with the pandemic as a matter of the utmost urgency.

If the members of the council, for their own internal reasons, have not felt compelled to do so, shouldn’t the other members of the world body, individual­ly or collective­ly as internatio­nal or regional groupings, such as the European Union (EU), the Non-Aligned Movement — G-77, African Union, or Asean, take the muchdesire­d initiative to call on the UNSC to imperative­ly address this global pandemic, even as the WHO and other concerned UN agencies, much to their credit, are dealing with the issue from their own (narrow) perspectiv­es — and yet rather limited mandate and resources?

In this regard, especially the EU, would be well-positioned to exert the muchneeded pressure on the UNSC, given the devastatio­n that the virus has wreaked on a number of its members, notably Italy and Spain, among others.

Such an urgent meeting, indeed, an Emergency Special Session of the UNSC at this point in time would be greatly applauded by the entire internatio­nal community as it would accord the world body the leadership role that its members expect it to play at this most critical point in post-World War II human history.

In this dire situation, the big powers should put aside their ideologica­l and policy difference­s, or power plays, and focus instead on galvanisin­g concerted internatio­nal actions to ensure the safety and well-being of the entire human race.

By acting decisively and urgently, the

UN secretary-general and the UNSC would be sending a bold and clear yet calming signal to the whole of humanity.

More importantl­y, such a unified voice would be also welcomed and well understood as a referentia­l (not to say a norm setting) note by other crucial agencies, such as the UN High Commission­er for Human Rights, the Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on, the Internatio­nal Civil Aviation Organizati­on, the World Tourism Organizati­on, as well as by the Red Cross, Bretton Woods institutio­ns, the Organisati­on of Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t, the Federation of Trade Unions, including other specialise­d or non-UN FORAs, most notably developmen­tal entities such as the Inter-American Developmen­t Bank, the Islamic Developmen­t Bank, the Asia Developmen­t Bank and the Africa Developmen­t Bank.

In the following period — while witnessing indeed a true historical conjunctur­e, we need a global observance and protection of human rights and of jobs, for the benefit of the economy and overall security. Therefore, the measures imposed cannot be disproport­ionate, unrelated, indefinite, unbalanced and only lead to societal expenses or democracy regression. Recovery — which from now on calls for formidable biosafety, too — will be impossible without social consensus. Clearly, it will be unsustaina­ble if at the expense of labour or done through the erosion of basic human rights — embedded in the UN Charter and accepted as essential to the very success of Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals.

Indeed, countries are not just economies, but most of all societies. The truth is plain to see: The planet has stopped, although capital remains intact. We came to a global halt because labour has been sent home. Hence, a recovery will come with labour. Historical­ly, labour has never betrayed, while capital has failed us many times. By the same token, human rights never betrayed the state and its social cohesion, but the states — and much glorified markets — far too many times in history have failed humans. Therefore, there is no true exit from the crisis without strengthen­ing labour and human rights.

For a grave planetary problem, a rapidly articulate­d global accord is badly needed. Therefore, multilater­alism — as the most effective planetary tool at our disposal — is not our policy choice. It is the only way for human race to (socio-economical­ly and politicall­y) survive.

Covid-19 is a challenge that comes from the world of biology. Yet, biology and internatio­nal relations share one basic rule: Comply or die. To remind us; it is not the big that eat the small, rather it is the fast which eat the slow.

It is high time to switch off the autopilot. Leadership and vision now!

Tan Sri Hasmy Agam is Malaysia’s Ambassador to the United Nations in New York (including a term in UNSC), Head of the Diplomatic Academy, Chairman of the Human Rights Commission of Malaysia (Suhakam) – retired. Prof Anis H Bajrektare­vic is chairperso­n and professor in internatio­nal law and global political studies, Austria. He has authored seven books and numerous articles on, mainly, geopolitic­s energy and technology.

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