UN MUST CHANGE AS GLOBAL CHALLENGES SURPASS ITS ABILITY TO RESPOND: ANTÓNIO GUTERRES, NEW UN CHIEF
New York: I am deeply honoured by the trust and
confidence Member States have placed in me, and determined to be guided by the
purposes and principles of the Charter.
First
of all, I would like to pay tribute to Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.
Secretary-General, your principled leadership has helped to chart the future of
the United Nations -- through the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development;
through your commitment to peace and security; through your initiative to put
human rights at the heart of our work. Under your direction, the world
committed to the historic Paris Agreement on climate change -- and ratified it
in record time. I strongly believe this momentum is unstoppable.
Dear Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, it is an honour to follow in your steps,
defending the same values that unite us. Thank you very much.
Twenty-one
years ago, when I took the oath of office to become Prime Minister of Portugal,
the world was riding a wave of optimism. The cold war had ended, and some
described that as the end of history. They believed we would live in a
peaceful, stable world with economic growth and prosperity for all. But,
the end of the cold war wasn’t the end of history. On the contrary,
history had simply been frozen in some places. When the old order melted
away, history came back with a vengeance.
Hidden
contradictions and tensions resurfaced. New wars multiplied and old ones
reignited. Lack of clarity in power relations led progressively to
greater unpredictability and impunity. Conflicts have become more complex
-- and interlinked -- than ever before. They produce horrific violations
of international humanitarian law and human rights abuses. People have
been forced to flee their homes on a scale unseen in decades. And a new
threat has emerged -- global terrorism. Megatrends -- including climate
change, population growth, rapid urbanization, food insecurity and water
scarcity -- have increased competition for resources and heightened tensions
and instability.
At
the same time, the last 20 years have seen extraordinary technological
progress. The global economy has grown; basic social indicators have
improved. The proportion of people living in absolute poverty has fallen
dramatically. But, globalization and technological progress have also
contributed to growing inequalities. A lot of people have been left
behind, even including in developed countries where millions of old jobs have
disappeared and new ones are out of reach for many. In many parts, youth
unemployment has exploded. And globalization has also broadened the reach
of organized crime and trafficking.
All
this has deepened the divide between people and political establishments.
In some countries, we have seen growing instability, social unrest -- even
violence and conflict. A little bit everywhere, voters now tend to reject
the status quo, and whatever Government proposal is put to a referendum.
Many have lost confidence not only in their Governments, but in global
institutions -- including the United Nations.
Fear
is driving the decisions of many people around the world. We must
understand their anxieties and meet their needs, without losing sight of our
universal values. It is time to reconstruct relations between people and
leaders -- national and international; time for leaders to listen and show that
they care, about their own people and about the global stability and solidarity
on which we all depend. And it is time for the United Nations to do the
same: to recognize its shortcomings and to reform the way it works.
This Organization is the cornerstone of multilateralism, and has contributed to
decades of relative peace. But, the challenges are now surpassing our
ability to respond. The United Nations must be ready to change.
Our
most serious shortcoming -- and here I refer to the entire international
community -- is our inability to prevent crises. The United Nations was
born from war. Today, we must be here for peace.
The
United Nations system has not yet done enough to prevent and respond to the
appalling crimes of sexual violence and exploitation committed under the UN
flag against those we are supposed to protect. I will work closely with
Member States on structural, legal and operational measures to make the
zero-tolerance policy for which Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has fought so
hard a reality. We must ensure transparency and accountability and offer
protection and effective remedies to the victims.
The
second key element of the reform agenda concerns the United Nations support to
Member States in achieving the Sustainable Development Goals and the objectives
of the Paris Agreement, an expression of global solidarity, with their promise
to leave no one behind. To do this, we will reposition development at the
centre of our work, and engage in a comprehensive reform of the United Nations
development system, at Headquarters and country levels. This must involve
leadership, coordination, delivery and accountability. We will build on
the outcome of the recent discussions among Member States.
We
must also bring the humanitarian and development spheres closer together from
the very beginning of a crisis to support affected communities, address
structural and economic impacts and help prevent a new spiral of fragility and
instability. Humanitarian response, sustainable development and
sustaining peace are three sides of the same triangle.
This
approach relates to the new way of working agreed at the World Humanitarian
Summit. To achieve this, we need more accountability, on the level of
each individual agency carrying out its mandate, but also its contribution to
the work of the United Nations system and of the system as a whole. A
strong culture of accountability also requires effective and independent
evaluation mechanisms.
The
third key area is management reform. We will build on existing efforts
and implement the recent initiatives that were approved. But, looking at
United Nations staff and budgetary rules and regulations, one might think that
some of them were designed to prevent, rather than enable, the effective
delivery of our mandates.
We
need to create a consensus around simplification, decentralization and
flexibility. It benefits no one if it takes nine months to deploy a staff
member to the field. The United Nations needs to be nimble, efficient and
effective. It must focus more on delivery and less on process; more on
people and less on bureaucracy. A culture of accountability also requires
strong performance management and effective protection for whistle-blowers.
And
it is not enough just to do better. We must be able to communicate better
about what we do, in ways that everybody understands. We need a
substantial reform of our communications strategy, upgrading our tools and
platforms to reach people around the world.
Finally,
management reform must ensure we reach gender parity sooner rather than
later. The initial target for the equal representation of women and men
among United Nations staff was the year 2000. Sixteen years later, we are
far from that goal. I pledge to respect gender parity from the start in
all my appointments to the Senior Management Group and the Chief Executives
Board.
By
the end of my mandate, we should reach full gender parity at the
Under-Secretary-General and Assistant Secretary-General levels, including
special representatives and special envoys. We need a clear road map with
benchmarks and time frames to achieve parity across the system, well before the
target year of 2030. And the same concern applies to regional diversity.
Finally,
any investment in a stronger United Nations must take staff into account.
I look forward to working once again alongside over 85,000 men and women
carrying out our mandate in 180 countries across the globe. Many of them
work in difficult and sometimes dangerous circumstances. With their
professionalism, expertise and dedication, they are the United Nations’ most
important resource, a resource that has to be cared for, developed and used
efficiently, and whose voice needs to be heard.
We
live in a complex world. The United Nations cannot succeed alone.
Partnership must continue to be at the heart of our strategy. We should
have the humility to acknowledge the essential role of other actors while
maintaining full awareness of our unique convening power.
Our
humanitarian and development efforts would be insignificant without the active
involvement of Member States and the contributions of civil society,
international financial institutions, private investors and even financial
markets. Several mediation efforts and peace operations would not be
possible without the engagement of regional organizations, particularly the
African Union, our most relevant international regional partner, both in peace
and security and in development.
Today´s
paradox is that, despite greater connectivity, societies are becoming more
fragmented. More and more people live within their own bubbles, unable to
appreciate their links with the whole human family. In the end, it comes
down to values, as was said so many times today. We want the world our
children inherit to be defined by the values enshrined in the United Nations
Charter: peace, justice, respect, human rights, tolerance and solidarity.
All major religions embrace these principles, and we strive to reflect them in
our daily lives.
But,
the threats to these values are most often based on fear. Our duty to the
peoples we serve is to work together to move from fear of each other, to trust
in each other. Trust in the values that bind us and trust in the
institutions that serve and protect us.
My
contribution to the United Nations will be aimed at inspiring that trust, as I
do my best to serve our common humanity. Thank you very much.
UN MUST CHANGE AS GLOBAL CHALLENGES SURPASS ITS ABILITY TO RESPOND: ANTÓNIO GUTERRES, NEW UN CHIEF
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