Naidu bats for reforms in UN Security Council

NEW DELHI, Nov 25:

Vice President M Venkaiah Naidu on Thursday emphasised the need for reforms in the UN Security Council and other key international organisations so as to make them reflective of contemporary realities and capable of dealing with challenges.
Addressing the first plenary session of the 13th ASEM Summit virtually, he said the world is witnessing and grappling with rapid economic, technological and security challenges, and the current multilateral system has fallen short in providing an effective response to these challenges.
He also underlined that reformed multilateralism is the driving principle that India has pursued for a purposeful reform of existing global institutional structures.
The two-day summit is being hosted by Cambodia in the virtual format and is themed ‘Strengthening Multilateralism for Shared Growth’.
The Indian delegation at ASEM-13 was led by the Vice President, who will also be addressing the retreat session of the summit on Friday.
Observing that without peace, development suffers, Naidu highlighted that lack of development and stifled economic progress create fertile ground for violence and instability.
Therefore, he called for efforts towards promoting economic activity and enhancing the livelihood security and suggested that it will go a long way in the recovery of nations adversely affected by COVID-19 pandemic.
Stressing the need to mitigate the causes of persistent insecurity at a global level, the vice president highlighted the need for reforms in the international structure responsible for maintaining global peace and security.
Opining that the multitude of challenges of today’s dynamic and interdependent world cannot be addressed with outdated systems, Naidu expressed an urgent need to re-imagine international cooperation and expand its ambition further.
“It is the lack of a coordinated global response that has exposed the vulnerabilities and weaknesses of the multilateral system as it stands today,” he said.
The Vice President also said the pandemic has exposed the fault lines from unreliable global supply chains to inequitable vaccine distribution, further underlining the need for global solidarity and strengthened multilateralism.
Noting that the re-imagined post pandemic world will make profoundly different demands from the multilateral system, he highlighted four important areas for international economic cooperation namely, resilient and reliable supply chains, health security, digital for development, and green and sustainable recovery. (PTI)