UN without reforms faces crisis of confidence, says Narendra Modi

Prime Minister, introduced by India’s U.N Ambassador T.S. Tirumurti, delivered his address on Monday via a recorded video.

September 22, 2020 03:16 am | Updated 08:07 am IST - Washington

Prime Minister Narendra Modi addresses on the commemoration of the 75th anniversary of the signing of the United Nations Charter and the adoption of a Commemorative Declaration. Twitter/@narendramodi

Prime Minister Narendra Modi addresses on the commemoration of the 75th anniversary of the signing of the United Nations Charter and the adoption of a Commemorative Declaration. Twitter/@narendramodi

In his message to commemorate the 75th anniversary of the signing of the United Nations Charter and the adoption of a Commemorative Declaration, Prime Minister Narendra Modi praised the UN but said the institution faced a “crisis of confidence.”

The Prime Minister, introduced by India’s U.N Ambassador T.S. Tirumurti, delivered his address on Monday via a recorded video — a format the UN has adopted, due to the pandemic, so it can avoid the customary gathering of world leaders in New York for its annual General Assembly debate.

Also read: 75th U.N. anniversary: Surplus of multilateral challenges, deficit of multilteral solutions, says Gutteres

Mr Modi said the commemorative declaration acknowledged that work needed to be done in conflict prevention, climate change, development and leveraging digital technology.

“The Declaration also acknowledges the need for reform of the United Nations itself. We cannot fight today’s challenges with outdated structures. Without comprehensive reforms, the UN faces a crisis of confidence’” Mr Modi said.

 

“For today’s interconnected world, we need a reformed multilateralism that reflects today’s realities, gives voice to all stake holders, addresses contemporary challenges and focuses on human welfare."

The Prime Minister also said the “world was a better place” because of the U.N. He recognized those who had worked for peace under the U.N flag including U.N peacekeepers and noted India’s contribution to peacekeeping. Yet, the U.N.’s original mission remained incomplete, he said.

Mr. Modi will again address the General Assembly on Saturday as part of the general debate. The speech is particularly significant this year as India will occupy an elected non-permanent two year term on the United Nations Security Council starting January 2021.

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