The Scotsman

Collective effort for a better global future is more important than ever

Scotland’s support for the UN’S Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals is solid, says David Hope-jones

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In 2015, Scotland was one of the first nations in the world to sign up to the UN’S Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGS). These 17 ‘Global Goals’ set targets to guide social, economic and environmen­tal developmen­t around the world to 2030. Almost every country has embraced this vision and these goals.

We are now at the half-way point of these Global Goals and it would be all too easy to allow this global ambition for a better world to be quietly forgotten. 2015 was an easy time to be ambitious, it now seems: few then would have predicted a global pandemic, a war in Europe, the rise of populism and xenophobia, or far-reaching economic contractio­n.

We are seeing our climate change faster than we feared. We are seeing

war, starvation and political instabilit­y in places unimaginab­le in 2015. we are seeing a future for our children which is looking more worrying by the day.

But global solidarity and collective effort for a better future is more important now than ever before: not just despite the many crises and challenges we face, but because of them.

Scotland may be a small nation, but we can, and must, show global leadership. We must ensure we do not waver in our commitment to a better world, whatever the challenges.

I was, therefore, delighted to spend three days recently at the Scottish Parliament, briefing MSPS on the Global Goals, with a pop-up exhibition giving case studies of real people-to-people and community-to-community partnershi­ps between Scotland and Malawi. MSPS from all five parties in Holy

rood took time to visit the exhibition, learning about the local Malawi links in their own constituen­cy and region, and re-committing themselves and their parties to the Global Goals.

Each MSP that visited the exhibition, which was sponsored by Liam Mcarthur MSP (representi­ng the especially strong links between Orkney and Malawi), chose one of the 17 Global Goals to personally champion. They each recorded a short video giving their support not just for their local links with Malawi but also for the SDG of their choice: giving a personal pledge to help ensure scotland delivers in this area, both at home and abroad.

The final hours of the exhibition coincided with a key moment in Holy rood: the stage 1 gender recognitio­n reform (Scotland) Bill debate and, associated to this, a Ministeria­l resignatio­n. It is to the First Minister’s immense credit that, facing news of this resignatio­n, and with TV cameras waiting for an interview with her, she made time to first visit our small charity’ s exhibition. She took time to listen, and to recommit Scotland to the UN Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals and its 163-year friendship with Malawi.

Global solidarity and long-term commitment­s to making a better world can be the first thing to be dropped when faced with economic, social or political crises. Scotland should be proud that the all-party political support which exists for progressiv­e inter nationalis­m, the global goals, and its dignified two-way partnershi­p with Malawi, remains unwavering through the good times and the bad. Long may this cross-partyconse­nsus and scotland’ s global leadership continue.

David Hope-jones OBE, Chief Executive, Scotland Malawi Partnershi­p

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