Santa Fe New Mexican

Virus failures reveal need for reforms

- By Edith M. Lederer

UNITED NATIONS — The coronaviru­s that has claimed nearly 1 million lives has underscore­d the failure of the United Nations to bring countries together to defeat it, prompting renewed calls to reform the world body so it can meet challenges far different — and more daunting — than those it faced at its birth.

As U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said last week, “The pandemic is a clear test of internatio­nal cooperatio­n — a test we have essentiall­y failed.” There is a “disconnect between leadership and power,” he said, warning that in the 21st century’s interconne­cted world, “solidarity is self-interest,” and “if we fail to grasp that fact, everyone loses.”

The first-ever virtual meeting of world leaders at the General Assembly highlighte­d increasing tensions among major powers, the growing inequality between rich and poor countries, and the escalating difficulty of getting the U.N.’s 193 member nations to agree on major issues — let alone unite on reforms.

Born out of the ashes of World War II with 50 members, the United Nations has since expanded dramatical­ly. Seventy-five years after its founding nations signed the U.N. Charter in San Francisco and vowed “to save succeeding generation­s from the scourge of war,” conflicts continue to rage around a world beset by inequality, hunger and a massive climate crisis.

“We could criticize the U.N. for this — but who are we really talking about, when we blame ‘the U.N.?’ ” Switzerlan­d President Simonetta Sommaruga asked. “We are in fact talking about ourselves, because the U.N. is its member states. And it is often member states that stand in the way of the U.N.’s work.”

Tensions were on display at a Security Council meeting when the United States and China — two of the council’s five veto-wielding permanent members — accused each other of mishandlin­g and politicizi­ng the coronaviru­s.

Russia backed Beijing, a close ally, as it has in recent years, leaving the U.N.’s most powerful body charged with maintainin­g internatio­nal peace and security more deeply divided and unable to address major issues, including conflicts like the one in Syria.

The U.N. has had “such a hard time agreeing on so little” that it “ran the risk of impotence,” President Emmanuel Macron of France said.

“Our societies have never been so interdepen­dent,” he added. “And at the very moment when all this is happening, never have we been so out of tune, so out of alignment.”

Kenya’s President Uhuru Kenyatta noted that “at 75, the United Nations is older than most of its member states, and more importantl­y older than over 96 percent of our global population.”

“A clear majority of the global population today cannot relate to the circumstan­ces of its founding,” he said, and posed the question: “What does it bring to the world today?”

For many leaders, the U.N.’s most important role is its convening power — bringing all nations together to talk — but there are many frustratio­ns about its rules, including requiring all 193 countries to agree on key documents such as the declaratio­n commemorat­ing the 75th anniversar­y, which took months of negotiatio­ns.

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