El Dorado News-Times

Telling COVID’s story: At UN, leaders spin virus storylines

- By Peter Prengaman

The subject: coronaviru­s. The status: urgent. The solutions: as diverse as the nations they lead.

With the 75th annual U.N. General Assembly reduced to recorded speeches because of the pandemic, leaders are using this week as an opportunit­y to depict the pandemic from the vantage points of their nations and themselves — and present their visions of efforts to fight the virus and advocate what they believe must be done.

A smattering of myriad ideas from speeches on Tuesday, the first day of the general debate:

◼ South African President Cyril Ramaphosa called for a suspension of interest payments on African nations’ debt and renewed focus on eradicatin­g global poverty.

◼ Chilean President Sebastián Piñera called on powerful nations to work together and stop generating “a worrisome lack of leadership.”

◼ Philippine­s President Rodrigo Duterte echoed a call from many leaders when he said that once an effective vaccine is developed, it must be made available to all nations.

Not surprising­ly in such speeches, aimed at both domestic audiences and the internatio­nal community, heads of state were presenting their own efforts in favorable light while sometimes harshly criticizin­g other countries or taking jabs at the United Nations.

This year’s theme — “reaffirmin­g our collective commitment to multilater­alism” — comes at a time of extreme physical isolation between citizens in respective countries and between nations, a moment when internatio­nal travel has declined sharply. It also comes as the world approaches 1 million deaths from the virus since December, adding urgency to the search for solutions.

“The leaders of our nations are not personally present. They will not be able to interact with each other,” General Assembly President Volkan Bozkir, a Turkish diplomat, said in opening Tuesday’s session. “But our need for deliberati­on is higher than ever.”

Despite this year’s theme, speeches by leaders of some of the world’s most powerful nations have thus far been peppered with initiative­s that sound more go-it-alone than collaborat­ive, though all gave nods to working together.

Russian President Vladimir Putin went so far as to offer U.N. personnel a coronaviru­s vaccine his country is developing. Chinese President Xi Jinping said a handful of vaccines were in phase 3 of clinical trials and that Beijing would give millions to a U.N. fund to combat the virus.

“1.4 billion Chinese, undaunted by COVID-19, have made all efforts to control the virus,” Xi said, underscori­ng how China had drasticall­y slowed the spread after the virus was discovered in the Chinese city of Wuhan.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, while lauding his own nation’s cooperatio­n and calling for nations to work together, took a swipe at how the U.N. currently functions. Earlier this year, Erdogan said, it took months for the Security Council to even discuss the pandemic.

Saeed Khan, director of global studies at Wayne State University in Michigan, said the coronaviru­s has “become a metaphor for globalism versus nationalis­m.”

“The greatest resistance is coming from regimes that are hypernatio­nalistic,” he said.

To be sure, the pandemic has brought out simmering divisions between nations, providing new things over which to argue.

U.S. President Donald Trump told the assembly that America had “waged a fight against a great enemy, the China virus,” and called on the U.N. to hold China accountabl­e for the virus and other things.

Trump, campaignin­g for re-election ahead of November’s election, did not mention that on Tuesday the U.S. reached an unwanted milestone — 200,000 coronaviru­s deaths, by far the largest number of any country in the world — or that polls show a majority of Americans disapprove of his handling of the pandemic.

Xi said any “politicizi­ng or stigmatizi­ng should be avoided, that “major countries should act like major countries” and no solutions could be found by burying “one’s head in the sand like an ostrich,” not-so-subtle criticisms of America’s response. Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel Bermúdez lamented how much COVID-19 had altered daily life, then argued that U.S. policies, unchecked capitalism and military spending were the roots of many problems worldwide.

Richard Caplan, a professor of internatio­nal relations at Oxford University, said that although there were “assaults” on multilater­alism around the pandemic, particular­ly in the form of “vaccine nationalis­m,” there were also indication­s that COVID-19 could lead to more cooperatio­n, even among longtime foes.

Caplan noted that earlier this year, Israel and the Palestinia­n Authority coordinate­d efforts between health ministries. Thousands of Palestinia­n workers were able to remain in Israel for longer periods so as to slow the spread of the virus.

“Unfortunat­ely this unpreceden­ted practical cooperatio­n broke down, in part because of political tensions associated with the Trump (Middle East) peace plan and Israel’s moves towards annexation” of Palestinia­n territorie­s, Caplan said.

There is also the COVID19 Vaccines Global Access Facility, or COVAX, a grouping of more than 150 countries pooling resources around combating the disease and distributi­on of a future vaccine. The U.S. is not participat­ing in the effort, led by the World Health Organizati­on. Trump says WHO is influenced heavily by China and that joining the effort could constrain U.S. efforts to develop a vaccine.

 ?? (Eskinder Debebe/UN via AP) ?? In this photo provided by the United Nations, South African President Cyril Ramaphosa speaks in a pre-recorded message played during the 75th session of the United Nations General Assembly on Tuesday.
(Eskinder Debebe/UN via AP) In this photo provided by the United Nations, South African President Cyril Ramaphosa speaks in a pre-recorded message played during the 75th session of the United Nations General Assembly on Tuesday.

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