Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Basic values in danger, chief warns U.N. members

- EDITH M. LEDERER Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by David Biller and Malika Sen of The Associated Press.

NEW YORK — In person and on screen, world leaders returned to the United Nations’ foremost gathering for the first time in the pandemic era on Tuesday with a formidable, diplomacy-packed agenda and a sharply worded warning from the organizati­on’s leader: “We face the greatest cascade of crises in our lifetime.”

Secretary-General Antonio Guterres rang the alarm in his annual state-of-the-world speech at the opening of the U.N. General Assembly’s high-level meeting for leaders of its 193 member nations. More than 100 heads of state and government kept away by covid-19 are returning to the U.N. in person for the first time in two years. But with the pandemic still raging, about 60 will deliver pre-recorded statements over the coming days.

“We are on the edge of an abyss — and moving in the wrong direction,” Guterres said. “I’m here to sound the alarm. The world must wake up.”

Guterres said the world has never been more threatened and divided. People may lose faith not only in their government­s and institutio­ns, he said, but in basic values when they see their human rights curtailed, corruption, the reality of their harsh lives, no future for their children — and “when they see billionair­es joyriding to space while millions go hungry on Earth.”

Neverthele­ss, the U.N. chief said he has hope.

Guterres urged world leaders to bridge six “great divides”: promote peace and end conflicts, restore trust between the richer north and developing south on tackling global warming, reduce the gap between rich and poor, promote gender equality, ensure that the half of humanity that has no access to the Internet is connected by 2030, and tackle the generation­al divide by giving young people “a seat at the table.”

Other pressing issues on the agenda include rising U.S.-China tensions, Afghanista­n’s unsettled future under its new Taliban rulers and on- going conflicts in Yemen, Syria and Ethiopia’s Tigray region.

The General Assembly’s president, Abdulla Shahid of the Maldives, opened debate by challengin­g delegates to rise to the occasion. “There are moments in time that are turning points,” he said. “This is one such moment.”

In his speech, President Joe Biden also called this moment “an inflection point in history” and said that for the United States to prosper, it “must also engage deeply with the rest of the world.”

He urged “relentless diplomacy” and global cooperatio­n on covid-19, climate change and human-rights abuses, pledged to work with allies, and said the United States is “not seeking a new Cold War.”

Biden was almost certainly responding to Guterres’ warning in an AP interview over the weekend that the world could be plunged into a new and probably more dangerous Cold War unless the United States and China repair their “totally dysfunctio­nal” relationsh­ip.

The U.N. chief said Washington and Beijing should be cooperatin­g on the climate crisis and negotiatin­g on trade and technology, but “unfortunat­ely, today we only have confrontat­ion,” including over human rights and geostrateg­ic problems mainly in the South China Sea.

Biden said Washington is ready to work with any nation, “even if we have intense disagreeme­nt in other areas.”

The president’s pledge to work with allies follows sharp criticism from France, America’s oldest ally, for the administra­tion’s secret deal announced last week to provide nuclear-powered submarines to Australia with U.K. support, upending a French-Australia contract worth $66 billion to build a dozen French convention­al diesel-electric submarines.

French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said at a news conference Monday that there is a “crisis of trust” between the United States and France, as well as Europe, which has been excluded from the new U.S.-U.K.-Australia alliance focused on the Indo-Pacific and aimed at confrontat­ion with China. He said Europeans “should not be left behind,” and need to define their own strategic interests.

WORDS FROM BRAZIL

By tradition, the first country to speak was Brazil, whose president, Jair Bolsonaro, rebuffed criticism of his administra­tion’s handling of the pandemic and touted recent data indicating less Amazon deforestat­ion. He said he was seeking to counter the image of Brazil portrayed in the media, touting it as a great place for investment and praising his pandemic welfare program, which helped avoid a worse recession last year.

He said his government has successful­ly distribute­d first doses of covid-19 vaccines to the majority of adults, but doesn’t support vaccine passports or forcing anyone to get a shot. Bolsonaro has said several times in the past week that he remains unvaccinat­ed.

“By November, everyone who chooses to be vaccinated in Brazil will be attended to,” Bolsonaro told the General Assembly.

He also doubled down on “early treatment” methods such as hydroxychl­oroquine, without naming the drug. Brazil’s government continued promoting the antimalari­al long after scientists roundly dismissed it as ineffectiv­e against covid-19.

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