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UN DEPUTY CHIEF TALKS ABOUT HER ‘JOURNEY OF DISCOVERY’ AT EXPO 2020

Amina Mohammed says the world’s fair signifies hope and solidarity in a world facing many challenges

- RAMOLA TALWAR BADAM

The deputy secretary general of the UN has praised Expo’s commitment to solidarity, peace and equality following a visit to the Dubai South site on the 76th anniversar­y of the founding of the world body.

Amina Mohammed said she was hopeful, despite the Covid-19 pandemic, to see a large number of people from all countries at Expo 2020 Dubai.

After a visit to some of the country pavilions, she spoke about how uplifted she was to see a wooden replica of the Knotted Gun statue at the UN headquarte­rs in New York.

“If you know the UN headquarte­rs you will have seen the gun that has a knot at the end which looks to end conflict,” she said.

“I think what was wonderful today was to see that same replica in wood, which really seems to sustain peace and that is what I hope will also come out of this gathering.

“The first in-person gathering of such numbers and such representa­tion – that gives us hope and signifies solidarity, [and] also a yearning for equality in the world.”

The sculpture shows the barrel of a .357 Magnum revolver tied into a knot.

Officially called Non-Violence, the Knotted Gun, an enduring symbol of peace, was created by Swedish artist Carl Fredrik Reuterswar­d and given to the UN by the government of Luxembourg.

Ms Mohammed said although progress had been made in the years since the formation of the UN, gaps in the developmen­t of human rights and dealing with global challenges remained.

“The current challenge we are dealing with is Covid and the pandemic,” she said.

“How we deal with that depends on how comprehens­ively we respond to health [and] socio-economic challenges.

“And what we have seen during the day that I have been at Expo is a realisatio­n in real terms of how countries have come here and shared bonds of partnershi­p of what they can do to face the challenges we have.”

Responding to a question about Afghanista­n, Ms Mohammed said the internatio­nal

community needed to keep the rights of women and girls in focus during negotiatio­ns with the Taliban.

“August 15 was a dark cloud for many in Afghanista­n, and certainly the internatio­nal community has found it a complex situation to address,” she said.

The UN recently said that some provinces in the north and south of Afghanista­n were accepting girls back into secondary schools thanks to mounting internatio­nal pressure.

As discussion­s continue with the Taliban, Ms Mohammed said: “We want to make sure they are shaping in defence of women and girls at the centre of Afghanista­n’s developmen­t and we are hopeful as we continue to work and engage.”

The UN has said that even before the current upheaval, about 18 million people, or half the Afghan population, depended on aid to meet their basic needs.

The need was to prevent an economic collapse and find ways to ensure that services continued to be available.

“It has opened up an opportunit­y to engage with the Taliban, to ensure that recognitio­n by the internatio­nal community doesn’t happen overnight and does not happen with the current values they bring,” Ms Mohammed said.

“To really communicat­e and negotiate that, when you become a member of the internatio­nal family there are certain norms that we expect to be adhered to.”

Ms Mohammed, who is also the chairwoman of the UN Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Group (SDG), said she was on a journey of discovery at Expo.

She was “reinvigora­ted” to see how sustainabl­e developmen­t goals could be better understood with daily and weekly themed programmes organised by Expo along with more than 192 participat­ing nations.

Seeing the number of schoolchil­dren at the world’s fair was another encouragin­g sign, along with the technology that countries put on show.

“It shows in spite of Covid, we are rising to the occasion, we are still hopeful, we are rising to forming partnershi­ps,” she said.

“People are coming to Expo. The number of students I have seen here means that the future is guaranteed and that there is hope for them to shape their future. I am really very proud of the associatio­n we have with the UAE.”

In a book she signed at Expo, Ms Mohammed wrote: “Such an inspiratio­n to walk in the present and see a future of promise, solidarity, dignity and hope for our world and all its people.

“We will take away from Expo 2020 visions, ideas, aspiration­s and continue to build a future where the 17 SDGs become a reality in the lives of all, leaving no one behind!!

“Congratula­tions to the UAE and deep appreciati­on for the exemplary leadership of my sister Minister Reem Al Hashimy.”

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 ?? Expo 2020 Dubai; Antonie Robertson / The National ?? UN deputy secretary general Amina Mohammed, above centre, visits Expo 2020 Dubai with Najeeb Al Ali, above left, executive director of Expo 2020 Bureau, and Dena Assaf, above right, Resident UN Co-ordinator. Left, a wooden replica of the Knotted Gun statue at Expo. The original is outside UN headquarte­rs in New York
Expo 2020 Dubai; Antonie Robertson / The National UN deputy secretary general Amina Mohammed, above centre, visits Expo 2020 Dubai with Najeeb Al Ali, above left, executive director of Expo 2020 Bureau, and Dena Assaf, above right, Resident UN Co-ordinator. Left, a wooden replica of the Knotted Gun statue at Expo. The original is outside UN headquarte­rs in New York

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