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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, July 1, 2015
THE UN CHARTER AT 70: TOWARD A
SAFER AND SUSTAINABLE FUTURE FOR
WE THE PEOPLES

Huffington Post (USA)
26 June 2015
By Ban Ki-moon
Long before I became Secretary-General, the United Nations occupied a
special place in my life. I was six years old when the Korean War broke
out. I have memories of my village in flames as my family sought refuge
in nearby mountains. But another sight is even more lasting: the UN
flag. We were saved from hunger by UN food relief operations; we
received textbooks from UNESCO; and when we wondered whether the outside
world cared about our suffering, the troops of many nations sacrificed
their lives to restore security and peace.
I know from my childhood, and now from decades of public service, the
immense difference the United Nations can make. As we mark the
anniversary of the adoption of the Organization's founding Charter on
June 26, 1945 in San Francisco, my hope is that the human family will
come together with greater determination to work for a safer and more
sustainable future for "we, the peoples," in whose name the Charter was
drafted.
The United Nations at 70 can look back on a proud record of working with
many partners to dismantle colonialism, triumph over apartheid, keep
the peace in troubled places and articulate a body of treaties and law
to safeguard human rights. Every day, the United Nations feeds the
hungry, shelters refugees and vaccinates children against polio and
other deadly diseases. Our relief workers brave remote and dangerous
environments to deliver humanitarian assistance, and our mediators
strive to find common ground between warring parties and peaceful
solutions to grievances and disputes. The United Nations was founded to
prevent another world war, and it has succeeded in that core mission;
despite grave setbacks, the past seven decades would surely have been
even bloodier without the United Nations.
Yet we are keenly aware that today's landscape is scarred by conflict,
exploitation and despair. At least 59.5 million people have fled their
homes - more refugees, displaced persons and asylum-seekers than at any
time since the end of the Second World War. Violence against women
blights all societies. At a time of pressing human needs, huge amounts
of money continue to be squandered on nuclear weapons and other
destabilizing military arsenals. The consequences of climate change are
ever more apparent - and have only just begun. And although the world
said "never again" after the Holocaust, and again after genocides in
Rwanda and Srebrenica, we continue to witness atrocious crimes by
violent extremists and others.
New powers have emerged since the representatives of 50 nations gathered
to draft the Charter, and membership in the Organization has grown to
193. Globalization, urbanization, migration, demographic shifts,
technological advances and other seismic developments continue to remake
our societies and transform international relations. Yet the Charter's
vision of a world of peace, and the values enshrined in the text -
dignity, equal rights, tolerance and freedom - remain touchstones for
people everywhere.
The 70th anniversary falls in a year of potentially momentous decisions
on our common future. Countries are shaping what we hope will be an
inspiring new sustainable development agenda and moving towards a
meaningful agreement on climate change. Our goal is transformation: we
are the first generation that can erase poverty from the earth - and the
last that can act to avoid the worst impacts of a warming world.
As the distinctions between the national and the international continue
to fall away, challenges faced by one become challenges faced by all,
sometimes gradually but often suddenly. With our fates ever more
entwined, our future must be one of ever deeper cooperation - nations
united by a spirit of global citizenship that lives up to the promise of
the Organization's name.
Ban Ki-moon is the Secretary-General of the United Nations
