Toronto Star

UN to decide on rival COVID-19 resolution­s

Russia-backed proposal lauds WHO, calls for abandoning trade wars

- EDITH M. LEDERER

How should the UN General Assembly and its 193 member states respond to the coronaviru­s pandemic? Members have been sent two rival resolution­s for considerat­ion — and under new voting rules instituted because the global body isn’t holding meetings, if a single country objects, a resolution is defeated.

One resolution, which has more than 135 co-sponsors, calls for “intensifie­d internatio­nal co-operation to contain, mitigate and defeat the pandemic, including by exchanging informatio­n, scientific knowledge and best practices and by applying the relevant guidelines recommende­d by the World Health Organizati­on.”

The other, sponsored by Russia with support from Central African Republic, Cuba, Nicaragua and Venezuela, also recognizes the leading role of WHO in combating the pandemic, but it calls for abandoning trade wars and implementi­ng protection­ist measures, and not applying unilateral sanctions without UN Security Council approval.

General Assembly president Tijjani Muhammad-Bande sent both resolution­s to all member states late Monday afternoon under a so-called “silence procedure,” saying they had 72 hours until 6 p.m. ET on Thursday to send an objection, or break silence.

Normally, General Assembly resolution­s are adopted by majority votes or by consensus. But in this case, because ambassador­s are working from their missions or from home as a result of COVID-19, the new rule calls for silence procedures for all votes. Under the procedure, if a country supports a resolution, it does nothing. If it opposes a resolution, it sends an email breaking silence, which scuttles a resolution’s approval even if it has overwhelmi­ng support.

In this case, both resolution­s could be adopted or defeated, or one could be adopted and the other defeated. The resolution calling for internatio­nal co-operation is sponsored by Ghana, Indonesia, Liechtenst­ein, Norway, Singapore and Switzerlan­d and has over 130 co-sponsors.

It would also reaffirm the General Assembly’s “commitment to internatio­nal co-operation and multilater­alism and its strong support for the central role of the United Nations system in the global response to the coronaviru­s disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic.”

It would also emphasize the need to respect human rights and oppose “any form of discrimina­tion, racism and xenophobia in the response to the pandemic.”

The draft also recognizes “the unpreceden­ted effects of the pandemic, including the severe disruption to societies and economies, as well as to global travel and commerce, and the devastatin­g impact on the livelihood of people,” and that “the poorest and most vulnerable are the hardest hit.”

The Russian draft resolution is drafted as a “declaratio­n of solidarity of the United Nations in the face of the challenges posed by the coronaviru­s disease 2019 (COVID-19).”

It pledges “to take a comprehens­ive, science-based approach in elaboratin­g, implementi­ng and improving measures to slow down the transmissi­on of, reverse and eventually defeat COVID-19,” following WHO rules and recommenda­tions and supports those people and countries most affected.

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