The Herald (Zimbabwe)

60 years later, NAM leaders still committed to founding principles

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BELGRADE. – After 60 years, leaders of the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) returned to the organisati­on’s birthplace in Belgrade, capital of Serbia.

During the two-day meeting hosted by Serbia, the 60th anniversar­y was marked the leaders reaffirmed their collective commitment to strengthen the principles and multiple tasks that were set 60 years ago.

As the pandemic ranges on, developing countries seized the opportunit­y and strongly demanded a fairer global distributi­on of Covid-19 vaccines and more funding from rich countries to help poorer ones adapt to a hotter world.

Speakers particular­ly hit out at global powers for failing to share vaccines equitably, suggesting poor countries were at the mercy of powerful states hoarding supplies.

“We are observers of a global power play and are subject to the benevolenc­e of powerful countries who give out their hoarded (vaccine) supplies at their own pace,” Ghanaian President Nana Akufo-Addo told the meeting.

Akufo-Addo stated at the gathering that “60 years later, the great powers have not disarmed, neither has the threat of nuclear war receded. They are still as powerful as they were then, and this has been highlighte­d by the Covid pandemic, and the unsavoury politics of vaccine nationalis­m we are currently witnessing.”

He bemoaned the fact that member states of NAM have become global power play, and are subject to the benevolenc­e of powerful countries, who give out their hoarded supplies at their own pace, not necessaril­y in tandem with realities.

“The need for self-reliance today in the global south is as important as positive neutralism was in the era of the Cold War. The impact of the pandemic on our population­s has been severe. We must stand shoulder-to-shoulder, and be resolved to ensure that we are better prepared for future pandemics,” Akufo-Addo said.

While stressing the importance of protecting the interests of the developing world, Akufo-Addo further reminded “there will be challenges but working hand-in-hand, we can move ahead together, through co-operation and solidarity, and to achieve the restructur­ing of the global financial system to facilitate the rapid developmen­t of our economies. The next 60 years of the movement must mark its empowermen­t to meet the wishes and aspiration­s for developmen­t, dignity and diversity.”

UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres urged wealthy nations to allocate half of the funds they provide to developing nations to tackle climate change to the job of helping those countries to adapt and survive in a warming world.

“Fifty percent of all climate finance provided by developed countries and multilater­al developmen­t banks should be dedicated to adaptation, to resilience,” Guterres said in a video message at the opening of a two-day meeting.

Wealthy nations are under increasing pressure to deliver on an unmet pledge, made in 2009, to send US$100 billion a year to help finance an adequate response by developing countries to rising global temperatur­es as the world prepares for COP26.

Of the finance channelled by wealthy countries to help poorer nations manage climate change, adaptation has normally accounted for only about 20 percent, averaging about US$30 billion per year in 2017-18. Most of the rest has been spent on reducing climate-heating emissions, such as by adopting renewable energy.

Guterres warned rich economies to ramp up efforts to help developing countries in a struggle against “biodiversi­ty loss, pollution and climate change” and further called on the Group of 20 rich nations to do more to help vaccinate the planet against Covid-19.

The observer status in the Non-Alignment Movement (NAM) that Russia gained opens up new opportunit­ies for interactio­n in ensuring global security and sustainabl­e developmen­t, Russian President Vladimir Putin said in his message to participan­ts of the NAM’s jubilee meeting posted on the Kremlin’s website.

NAM plays quite a significan­t role as an internatio­nal organizati­on on the global scene, the Russian leader stressed.

“It [ the Non- Alignment Movement] consistent­ly safeguards the principles of the unconditio­nal equality of all the states, the respect for their sovereignt­y and legitimate interests and favors a constructi­ve multilater­al dialogue in strict compliance with the letter and spirit of the UN Charter,” Putin pointed out.

NAM’s‘s positive potential is specially needed now that “the situation in the world is becoming increasing­ly turbulent and mankind is confronted with a growing number of threats and challenges,” the message reads.

The movement is an internatio­nal organizati­on of member states that oppose participat­ion in military-political blocs and favor the peaceful co-existence of peoples. Its 60th anniversar­y brought together mother than 100 countries, with 43 delegation­s led by foreign ministers. After the United Nations, it is the largest grouping of states worldwide.

Ghana’s first President, Osagyefo Dr Kwame Nkrumah, was one of the five historic founding fathers of the Movement. India’s Jawaharlal Nehru, Indonesia’s Ahmed Sukarno, Egypt’s Gamel Abdel Nasser and former Yugoslavia’s Josip Broz Tito launched the Movement in Belgrade in 1961. – Moderndipl­omacy.eu

 ?? ?? Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Trade Minister Frederick Shava met his Serbian counterpar­t Nikola Selakovi on the sidelines of the NAM Conference in Belgrade on Monday and discussed potential collaborat­ion on agricultur­e and education. The two ministers agreed on the need to re-open embassies in each other’s capitals as part of Zimbabwe’s engagement and re-engagement drive
Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Trade Minister Frederick Shava met his Serbian counterpar­t Nikola Selakovi on the sidelines of the NAM Conference in Belgrade on Monday and discussed potential collaborat­ion on agricultur­e and education. The two ministers agreed on the need to re-open embassies in each other’s capitals as part of Zimbabwe’s engagement and re-engagement drive

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