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Davos is a place for optimism, not just a forum for the world’s financial elite

- JANINE DI GIOVANNI Janine di Giovanni is a visiting fellow at Johns Hopkins University and a columnist for The National

The last day of the World Economic Forum at Davos is always anticlimac­tic, and slightly depressing.

The Belvedere Hotel, the site of so many parties and the temporary home of heads of states and government­s during the five-day conference, begins dismantlin­g tables and chairs. Rooms that a few hours earlier were packed with the chattering classes are emptied. The Promenade, where Uber, Infosys, Palatin and supporters of Ukraine take over shopfronts and host events, begin the slow return to their natural habitat.

By Friday, the local train weaving through the snowy mountains between Davos and Landquart is packed with delegates, entreprene­urs and start-up chief executives returning home and ruminating on what they learnt this past week. The very rich, of course, don’t use public transport – they fly out with helicopter­s or chauffeurs to their private planes in Zurich.

But Davos, as the WEF is commonly referred to, is so much more than a gathering of shiny people with plenty of capital, or an echo chamber. The spirit of Davos is an open forum, a dialogue between thought and emerging leaders. It is a conduit for connection­s.

On some levels, it is truly glamorous – with casual sightings of Sting, Bill Gates, Angelique Kidjo and Diane von Furstenber­g in snow hats and down coats trudging through the snow. But there is also something distinctly egalitaria­n about Davos. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy had to line up at the Belvedere just like everyone else to get past the security checkpoint. Former British prime minister and now Foreign Secretary, Lord David Cameron, goes to Barry’s Piano Bar for a nightcap and hangs out with the crowd.

Everyone is friendly and willing to have a 30-minute coffee meeting. I saw one billionair­e investor ambushed by a youthful tech start-up entreprene­ur at an elevator. He was listening politely and gave the techie his card. That wouldn’t happen in New York or London.

The truth about Davos is that there are multilayer­s of committed people, not just the financial elite. It has been called “a trade show for big ideas” by The New York Times, which is probably the best descriptio­n of it – a potent combinatio­n of public and private, a place where political, business and community leaders come together.

But Davos could also be the start for roadmaps of hope. Government­s do send leaders to Davos with the hope of back-channellin­g intractabl­e conflicts. That was clearly the logic behind the presence of both US Secretary of State Antony Blinken and US National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan.

The beauty of Davos is the access. You ride the shuttle bus number one next to Nobel Prize winners and billionair­es. There is also energy and youth. Davos brings the next generation of chief executives who come to linger on the outskirts off-Davos. They don’t have badges to the conference, but they buy a “hotel badge” for a few hundred euros, share an apartment outside of town with friends, and gather in clans on the Promenade.

I listened to startling, bright conversati­ons and visions for Web3, AI and climate change. Inside the conference, you meet the World Economic Forum’s Global Shapers and Young Global Leaders, programmes created by Prof Klaus Schwab, the WEF founder. These people will be the next generation of deal makers and peace bringers.

There are also humanitari­ans who are awarded for their work in their homes, such as Diebedo Francis Kere, an architect I met standing in the security line, who was one of this year’s Crystal Awardees for contributi­ng to social change. Mr Kere lives in Berlin but comes from a village in Burkina Faso where he was the first child to go to school. He now builds schools for the Gando community.

There are many who don’t win awards, too, but are doing purposeful work. I met an activist who runs an NGO that helps start businesses globally for members of communitie­s who are subjugated in places such as Uganda or Jamaica. There are also humanitari­ans such as former British foreign secretary David Miliband, head of the Internatio­nal Rescue Committee, who argue for ways to make the global financial system work for the most vulnerable communitie­s. Human rights defenders such as Amnesty Internatio­nal’s Secretary General Agnes Callamard are also in attendance.

It’s within this demographi­c that change happens because given the collective brains and power in one Swiss city, anything is possible.

This year, the theme of WEF was rebuilding trust. Never was this more needed.

The event took place during an extremely painful period in history. The war in Ukraine is still raging and Mr Zelenskyy reminded us at his Congress Centre speech on Tuesday that we must continue to support

In our uncertain times, Davos is a place where bilateral meetings can uncover the road that leads to peace treaties

the fight against Russia. The Middle East has a brutal war in Palestine-Israel as well as flashpoint­s in Yemen, Pakistan and Iran. Neither Syria nor Iraq is fully stable. Times are so uncertain that the Taliban called for peace between Pakistan and Iran.

Meanwhile, in the many lines stretching throughout the Congress Centre (for coffee, for meetings, for entry to a popular event), there was much talk of Donald Trump’s ascension in the US presidenti­al polls and President Joe Biden’s rapid decline because of his inaction over protecting Gaza. At the private dinners, New York captains of industry argued that Israel has a right to self-defence while briefings on the humanitari­an catastroph­e in Gaza left others in tears. But there was also dialogue – people tend to listen to each other in a small environmen­t because they are there to be part of an open forum.

Prof Schwab’s original vision when he founded the World Economic Forum in 1971 was to create a collaborat­ive place where this kind of magic can happen – a spirit of brain power, creativity, imaginatio­n and yes, world power. It is a place where bilateral meetings can lead to peace treaties, where there is real public and private co-operation and where business, political and community leaders meet on the shuttle bus.

Perhaps it is the beauty of the mountains that inspired the German novelist Thomas Mann to write The Magic Mountain – that place that provides a backdrop to fulfilling dialogue. Perhaps it is the stimulatio­n of the whirl of so many ideas. But Davos continues to set the agenda to reflect on the big questions we’ll see in the year ahead.

 ?? AP ?? The World Economic Forum continues to set the agenda as those attending reflect on the big issues we’ll see in the year ahead
AP The World Economic Forum continues to set the agenda as those attending reflect on the big issues we’ll see in the year ahead
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