Manila Bulletin

Our commitment to multilater­alism

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The United Nations celebrated its 75th anniversar­y last September 21 with the theme “The future we want; the United Nations we need — reaffirmin­g our collective commitment to multilater­alism.” Multilater­alism is a concept that scholars have long been studying in internatio­nal relations. It calls on states to follow internatio­nal norms and pay great respect to internatio­nal institutio­ns. This contrasts with unilateral­ism, where a state upholds national political and commercial interests as it seeks to influence internatio­nal relations. There is also the concept of bilaterali­sm where a state forms alliances that discrimina­tes against a third party.

President Duterte affirmed the nation’s commitment to multilater­alism in his recent speech before the UN General Assembly when he said, in relation to the COVID-19 pandemic: “To this end, we rededicate ourselves to multilater­alism. The UN remains humanity’s essential organizati­on. But it is only as effective as we make it. Let us empower UN — reform it — to meet the challenges of today and tomorrow. Let us strengthen it so it can fully deliver its mandate to maintain peace and security, uphold justice and human rights, and promote freedom and social progress for all.”

In his own UN speech, China President Xi Jinping also highlighte­d multilater­alism in his discourse on today’s problems, from the global COVID crisis to the challenge of climate change. On the pandemic, he reaffirmed China’s $2-billion donation to the efforts of the UN and the World Health Organizati­on against COVID-19 and declared that China’s vaccine, when ready, will be a “global public good.” He reiterated China’s call for the world to come together in a “Community of Shared Future for Mankind.”

Pope Francis, speaking at the same UN forum as head of the world’s smallest state, echoed the call for multilater­alism. “At present, we are witnessing an erosion of multilater­alism, which is all the more serious in light of the developmen­t of new forms of military technology…. We need to break with the present climate of distrust,” he said.

The special session of the UN General Assembly gave the world’s national leaders an opportunit­y to address the whole world via modern technology, without physically gathering together in view of the ongoing pandemic.

President Duterte’s statement in one part of his speech on the 2016 Arbitral Court ruling on the South China Sea drew a great deal of reaction and comment among local officials. But to the world community, it was his oneness with other world leaders, including China’s President Xi Jinping and the Vatican’s Pope Francis, in upholding multilater­alism in world affairs as most significan­t.

In a world of so much division and self-interest and unilateral­ism, we need more nations and more leaders to uphold the principle of multilater­alism — of reciprocit­y, of burden sharing, of joint action in world relations and world affairs.

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