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UN chief says race to reach SDGs ¡®can and must¡¯ be turned around

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The COVID pandemic has taken four million lives, devastated the global economy, pushed a further 124 million people into extreme poverty and continues to inflict profound suffering ¨C dramatically impacting progress towards the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs),?the UN chief said on July 13 at a key international forum.

¡°Nearly one person in three around the world could not access adequate food in 2020 ¨C an increase of nearly 320 million people in one year¡±, Secretary-General Anto?nio Guterres told the Opening of the Ministerial Segment of the High-Level Political Forum on Sustainable Development (HLPF), the UN¡¯s core review platform of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and its 17 SDGs.

Devastating repercussions

He painted a grim picture of an estimated 4.6 per cent drop in the global GDP during last year; the equivalent of 255 million full-time jobs lost in working hours.

He said two-in-three students were still affected by school closures ¨C with many, particularly girls, who may never return, contributing to a surge in child marriage and increased child labour. ?

¡°Violence against women has risen to shocking levels, with reports doubling and tripling in some places¡±, he added, while pointing to the added burden of unpaid domestic and care work that is ¡°squeezing women out of the?labour?force¡±.

Climate, inequality

Meanwhile, the climate crisis and growing inequality, have become even more dangerous as carbon dioxide concentrations?have soared to the highest level in three million years, some?¡°148 per cent above pre-industrial levels¡±, said Mr. Guterres.

Biodiversity is?declining at an ¡°unprecedented and alarming rate¡±, with one million species risking extinction and 10 million hectares of forests lost annually.

And inequality?is at unsustainable levels as the net worth of some 2,500 billionaires?increased by over $5.2 billion per day during the pandemic, while?four billion?are still without any form of basic social protection.

¡°All the while, conflicts and crises have left one per cent of the world¡¯s population forcibly displaced¡±, the UN chief said.

Still hope

Noting that ¡°we are moving farther away from our goals¡±, the Secretary-General highlighted that those living in poverty is expected to represent seven per cent by 2030 ¨C only marginally below 2015 levels - while temperature increases have put us ¡°on the verge of the abyss¡±.

However, he maintained that the situation ¡°can and must¡± be turned around.?

"We have the knowledge, the science, the technology and the resources¡±, said the UN chief. ¡°What we need is unity of purpose, effective leadership from all sectors, and urgent, ambitious action¡±.

Call to action

The Secretary-General emphasized that the Forum can ¡°help turn the tide¡± during this ¡°pivotal time¡±.

To end the pandemic and get the SDGs back on track, he called for decisive action in four key areas, beginning with global access to COVID-19 vaccines, tests, treatments and support.

He stressed the need for ¡°urgent, ambitious climate action, including on finance¡±, and thirdly, for investing in more equal and inclusive societies.

Finally, he said development finance would underpin the cost of decisive action: ¡°Let us renew our determination to build a strong, sustainable and inclusive recovery from the pandemic, and to take decisive action together to defeat the climate crisis and keep the promise of the 2030 Agenda.¡±

Source£ºUnited Nations£¨www.un.org£©
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