Arab Times

Global Citizen Live generates $1.1 billion to fight poverty

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NEW YORK, Sept 28, (AP): Global Citizen Live, a 24-hour concert that featured performanc­es from Stevie Wonder, Jennifer Lopez, BTS and Elton John and dozens of other stars, raised more than $1.1 billion in commitment­s and pledges over the weekend to fight extreme poverty.

Broadcasti­ng from sites on six continents, including New York’s Central Park and in front of the Eiffel Tower in Paris, Global Citizen also secured pledges from France for 60 million COVID-19 vaccine doses for developing countries and corporate pledges for planting 157 million trees around the world.

Vaccine pledges, which also came from the government­s of Croatia and Ireland, followed numerous pleas, including from Prince Harry and Meghan, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex, onstage at Central Park on Saturday afternoon.

“This year, the world is expected to produce enough doses to meet the target of vaccinatin­g 70% of people in every single country,” Meghan, the Duchess of Sussex, said to cheers from the Central Park crowd. “But it is wrong that so much of the vaccine supply has only gone to just 10 wealthy nations so far, and not everyone else.”

The U.S. government pledged $295 million for humanitari­an needs around the world caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Major philanthro­pic commitment­s came from the Lego Foundation, who pledged $150 million to support UNICEF and other partners working with children, and Rotary Internatio­nal, which pledged $98 million in grant funding in 2022.

The event featured numerous music collaborat­ions, including

Billie Eilish and Finneas joining Coldplay in New York and Charlie Puth joining Elton John in Paris, but joint efforts took places offstage as well. The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, The Children’s Investment Fund Foundation (CIFF) and a private foundation teamed up to launch a $50 million fund to support the United Nations Population Fund. The CIFF also committed $50 million to UNICEF to fund child nutrition projects.

Movement

Namati, The Charles Stewart Mott Foundation, and The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation collective­ly committed $20 million as seed funding to launch the Legal Empowermen­t Fund, which they hope will help raise $100 million over 10 years to support the justice movement.

Hugh Evans, CEO of Global Citizen, told The Associated Press that the 24-hour event was needed because COVID-19 has erased decades of gains, resulting in 150 million more people in extreme poverty this year and 41 million people in Africa facing starvation. Evans says climate change is another global issue that threatens to push more people into extreme poverty.

During Global Citizen Live, more than a dozen corporatio­ns, including Proctor & Gamble, Starbucks, Delta Air Lines, American Express and Citi, joined the Race to Zero Campaign, which seeks to reduce net carbon emissions around the world to zero by 2050.

“Future generation­s will hold us responsibl­e,” said Alok Sharma, president-designate for COP26, the United Nations’ climate change conference in November.

“Call on the richest countries to make good on their promise of money, to support developing countries deal with the impacts of climate change. And call on world leaders to deliver an outcome at Glasgow we can all be proud of.”

Also:

BOSTON: The guitar played by Johnny Ramone on all 15 Ramones albums and at nearly 2,000 live performanc­es by the rock band sold at auction over the weekend for more than $900,000, the auctioneer said Monday.

The 1965 Mosrite Ventures II electric guitar was bought by a collector in the US who wishes to remain anonymous, Boston-based RR Auction said in a statement.

Ramone, whose real name was John Cummings, bought the guitar to replace his original blue Ventures II, which was stolen, according to RR Auction.

It was played at every Ramones performanc­e from November 1977 until his retirement in August 1996, RR said. He died in 2004.

The guitar, along with other Ramones memorabili­a, came from the collection of Daniel Rey, a musician and producer who was also a longtime Ramones collaborat­or.

Some of the other items sold included Johnny Ramone’s Mark-2 signature guitar for almost $50,000, and Joey Ramone’s Shure microphone­s from the final Ramones concert for more than $13,000.

The auction began Aug. 24 and concluded Saturday.

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