Ottawa Citizen

Harper shuns chance to speak at UN

Others call on Tories to help fix world body

- LEE BERTHIAUME

More than a dozen former Canadian ministers, senior diplomats and others are calling on the federal Conservati­ves to re-engage with, and help fix, the United Nations, even as Prime Minister Stephen Harper prepares to skip another opportunit­y to address the world body this month.

The Prime Minister’s Office has confirmed Harper will be in New York next week, where world leaders will be gathering to speak during the opening of the UN’s 68th General Assembly.

However, although Harper will be in the city from Tuesday to Thursday, he will not be one of the dozens of leaders appearing at the podium.

Rather, the prime minister will attend a side event at the UN on maternal and child health, and participat­e in a discussion hosted by the Canadian-American Business Council and a roundtable of business leaders.

Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird will deliver Canada’s remarks on Sept. 30, after all world leaders who want to speak have done so, and when much of the world’s attention has turned elsewhere.

Harper also skipped last year’s UN General Assembly opening, even though he was in New York to receive an award from a religious organizati­on called the Appeal of Conscience Foundation.

In fact, the last time Harper addressed the General Assembly was in September 2010, when Canada was in the midst of an ultimately unsuccessf­ul bid for a two-year term on the UN Security Council.

Harper’s only other General Assembly appearance was during his first year in power, 2006.

It’s not unusual for a Canadian prime minister to skip the occasional General Assembly meeting: Brian Mulroney addressed the world body three times over his eight years in office, while Jean Chrétien spoke to the UN five times in 10 years.

But Harper’s absence is seen as different because his government has had a strained relationsh­ip with the UN, which has at times been reciprocat­ed by the world body, most tellingly when Canada failed to win the Security Council seat.

On Monday, a group of 17 former ministers, senior diplomats, academics and civil society leaders will hold press conference­s across the country calling on the Conservati­ve government to revisit its relationsh­ip with the UN.

Former foreign affairs minister Lloyd Axworthy said there is a real need for countries such as Canada to help fix the UN as it struggles to address internatio­nal crises such as the situation in Syria.

“How do you stop government­s from murdering their own people? If it’s not going to be the United Nations, who’s it going to be?” Axworthy asked.

“But in terms of the broad political issues, I think the United Nations needs a reform. And we’ve seen the really disastrous consequenc­es of not having a functionin­g United Nations when it came to the question of what’s happening in Syria.”

Axworthy acknowledg­ed prime ministers don’t speak to the General Assembly every year, “but if he’s in New York, a couple of hours at the General Assembly could be very much an opportunit­y to make a contributi­on to the United Nations at a time when it needs it.”

“There is a feeling that by not engaging in a very active way at the United Nations, we’re really missing opportunit­ies to help provide a reform agenda,” he added. “I think Canada is a respected voice. People listen to us. We have influence. And a prime ministeria­l statement would give it very significan­t weight.”

 ?? EMMANUEL DUNAND/AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Prime Minister Stephen Harper will be in New York next week, but not to address the UN General Assembly.
EMMANUEL DUNAND/AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILES Prime Minister Stephen Harper will be in New York next week, but not to address the UN General Assembly.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada