Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

World at ‘breaking point’ due to inequaliti­es, UN leader says

- By Cara Anna The Associated Press

JOHANNESBU­RG — Saying “we are at the breaking point,” the U.N. secretary-general made a sweeping call Saturday to end the global inequaliti­es that sparked this year’s massive anti-racism demonstrat­ions and have been further exposed by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“COVID-19 has been likened to an X-ray, revealing fractures in the fragile skeleton of the societies we have built,” Antonio Guterres said as he delivered the Nelson Mandela Annual Lecture.

“It is exposing fallacies and falsehoods everywhere: The lie that free markets can deliver health care for all, the fiction that unpaid care work is not work, the delusion that we live in a post-racist world, the myth that we are all in the same boat.”

He said developed countries are strongly invested in their own survival and have “failed to deliver the support needed to help the developing world through these dangerous times.”

The U.N. chief ’s address marked what would have been the birthday of former South African president and Nobel Peace Prize winner Mandela.

South Africa, the world’s most unequal country a quarter-century after the end of the racist system of apartheid, is quickly becoming one of the world’s hardest-hit nations in the pandemic and now makes up roughly half of Africa’s confirmed coronaviru­s cases. Already its public hospitals are nearly overwhelme­d.

The speech by the U.N. chief took aim at the vast inequality of wealth — “The 26 richest people in the world hold as much wealth as half the global population,” Guterres said — and other inequaliti­es involving race, gender, class and place of birth.

These, he said, are seen in the world’s fragmented response to the pandemic as government­s, businesses and even individual­s are accused of hoarding badly needed testing, medical and other supplies for themselves.

The legacy of colonialis­m shows in global power relations, Guterres added.

Developing countries, and especially African nations, are under-represente­d at the levels of power including at financial institutio­ns like the World Bank and political ones like the U.N. Security Council, whose five most powerful members — the U.S., Britain, France, Russia and China — date from the 1940s when the world body was created.

“Inequality starts at the top: in global institutio­ns. Addressing inequality must start by reforming them,” Guterres said, offering some solutions.

A new generation of social protection is needed, including universal health coverage and perhaps maybe even a universal basic income he said, adding “individual­s and corporatio­ns must pay their fair share.”

Education spending in low and middle-income countries should more than double by 2030 to $3 trillion a year, he said.

Answering questions after his speech, Guterres called for “massive support” for the developing world including debt write-offs. He said the suspension of debt payments until the end of this year, which was agreed upon by the G-20, the world’s 20 major economic powers, “is clearly not enough.”

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