79th UNGA: Prof Yunus set to speak at biggest global platform since becoming CA
UNB
Publish: 19 Sep 2024, 12:25 PM
Photo Credit: Mahmud Hossain Opu
Dhaka,
Sept 18 (UNB) - Chief Adviser Prof Muhammad Yunus is set to leave for New York
early Sunday to attend the 79th United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) which is
seen as a big opportunity for him to share his government's economic plans,
including what areas specifically the international community can be helpful in
strengthening and stabilizing Bangladesh's economy.
The Interim government
Chief Adviser will lead a "small and functional" delegation to the
79th United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) in New York, said Foreign Adviser
Md Touhid Hossain who will accompany Prof Yunus during his week-long stay in
New York.
Hossain said only those
with direct responsibilities at the UNGA will accompany the Chief Adviser.
There might be some
meetings on the sidelines, but due to his limited stay in New York, the scope
will also be limited.
The Chief Adviser is
likely to have a number of bilateral meetings and will attend a meeting on the
Rohingya crisis on the sidelines of the UNGA.
Bilateral meetings on
the sidelines usually get finalised at the last moment.
South Asian affairs
expert Michael Kugelman said Prof Yunus' participation at the 79th UN General
Assembly (UNGA) will be a big opportunity for him to share his government's
economic plans, including what areas specifically the international community
can be helpful in strengthening and stabilizing Bangladesh's economy.
"He would be
speaking in New York on the biggest global platform since he took over the role
of adviser leading the interim government," said Kugelman, Director of the
South Asia Institute at Wilson Center in Washington, D.C.
Kugelman said there are
several things that Prof Yunus could do, several things that he could say.
"I think that above
all he should lay out a vision for governance, the goals of the interim
government, his plans for reforms and his efforts to push for the restoration
of democracy."
Kugelman said he thinks
that Prof Yunus' platform at the UNGA would give him an opportunity to weigh in
on what is arguably Bangladesh's biggest humanitarian challenge, the Rohingya
refugee issue.
"I think that it
would be useful for him to make a pitch for international assistance or more
international assistance for Rohingya refugees, which would be an especially
important pitch for two reasons," he said.
The 79th session of the
UN General Assembly (UNGA 79) was opened on September 10. The first day of the
high-level General Debate will be held on Tuesday, September 24.
Meanwhile, the Heads of
State and Government will gather at UN Headquarters in New York on September
22-23 to address the critical challenges and gaps in global governance exposed
by recent global shocks.
The Summit of the
Future, the first of its kind, will bring together leaders, advocates, and
activists of all ages to determine how our international system can better meet
the needs of current and future generations.
Countries must use a
once-in-a-generation UN summit to address current and emerging global
challenges and reform outdated international institutions, Secretary-General
Antonio Guterres said in New York.
Guterres was speaking as
negotiations for the Summit of the Future, which opens at UN Headquarters on
Sunday, enter the final stretch.
"I have one
overriding message today: an appeal to Member States for a spirit of
compromise. Show the world what we can do, when we work together," he
said.
'An essential first
step'
The two-day Summit of
the Future is "an essential first step towards making global institutions
more legitimate, effective, and fit for the world of today and tomorrow,"
Guterres told journalists.
He said work already
done in the lead-up reveals "potential breakthroughs on a number of
important fronts".
This includes "the
strongest language on Security Council reform in a generation - and the most
concrete step towards Council enlargement since 1963", the first-ever
governance measures for Artificial Intelligence (AI) and other technologies, and
advancements in reforming the international financial architecture.
Other items cover
financing for the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and commitment to
advance an SDG Stimulus to boost financial support to developing
countries.
"It would be tragic
if all of these would be lost," he warned.
Challenges, crises and
conflict
Guterres said the Summit
is "so critical" because "international challenges are moving
faster than our ability to solve them."
He pointed to
"out-of-control geo-political divisions and runaway conflicts - not least
in Ukraine, Gaza, Sudan and beyond," in addition to "runaway"
climate change, inequalities and debt, and the development of AI and other
technologies that lack guidance or guardrails.
"Crises are
interacting and feeding off each other - for example, as digital technologies
spread climate disinformation that deepens distrust and fuels
polarization," he said.
Reform multilateral
institutions
Meanwhile, multilateral
institutions "born in a bygone era for a bygone world" simply cannot
keep up.
Guterres said so many of
the challenges the world is facing today were not on the radar 80 years ago
when these institutions were created.
"Our founders
understood that times would change," he said. "They understood that
the values that underpin our global institutions are timeless - but the
institutions themselves cannot be frozen in time."
An ever-changing world
He said the
peacebuilders back then could not have predicted the changes that have occurred
over the past eight decades.
They include the
independence movements, the economic and geopolitical rise of many developing
countries, catastrophic climate consequences, space exploration, and the
development of the Internet, smartphones and social media, which are boosted by
AI.
"Like our founders,
we cannot know precisely what the future holds," he acknowledged.
"But we don't need
a crystal ball to see that 21st century challenges require problem-solving
mechanisms that are more effective, networked and inclusive; that serious power
imbalances in global institutions must be adjusted and updated; and that our
institutions must draw on the expertise and representation of all of
humanity."
Although change will not
happen overnight, "it can start today," he insisted.
Finish the job
Member States attending
the Summit are expected to adopt a Pact for the Future, with a Global Digital
Compact and Declaration on Future Generations annexed to it.
Guterres expressed hope
that they will "do everything possible" to get these documents
"over the finish line".
"We can't create a
future fit for our grandchildren with systems built for our grandparents,"
he said, stressing that the Summit "cannot fail".
World leaders
More than 130 Heads of
State and Government are scheduled to attend the Summit of the Future, which is
taking place from 22-23 September - just ahead of the annual debate in the UN
General Assembly.
The Summit will be
preceded by two "action days" where non-governmental organizations
(NGOs), academics and private sector representatives will engage on the main
themes.
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