logo
There is no alternative to multilateralism

There is no alternative to multilateralism

The Star13-07-2025
THE year 2025 should be a time of celebration, marking eight decades of the United Nations' existence. But it risks going down in history as the year when the international order built since 1945 collapsed.
The cracks had long been visible. Since the invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan, the intervention in Libya, and the war in Ukraine, some permanent members of the Security Council have trivialised the illegal use of force.
The failure to act vis-à-vis the genocide in Gaza represents a denial of the most basic values of humanity. The inability to overcome differences is fueling a new escalation of violence in the Middle East, the latest chapter of which includes the attack on Iran.
The law of the strongest also threatens the multilateral trading system. Sweeping tariffs disrupt value chains and push the global economy into a spiral of high prices and stagnation. The World Trade Organisation has been hollowed out, and no one remembers the Doha Development Round.
The 2008 financial collapse exposed the failure of neoliberal globalisation, but the world remained locked into the austerity playbook. The choice to bail out the ultra-wealthy and major corporations at the expense of ordinary citizens and small businesses has deepened inequality. In the past ten years, the US$33.9 trillion (RM144.4 trillion) accumulated by the world's richest 1% is equivalent to 22 times the resources needed to eradicate global poverty.
The stranglehold on the state's capacity for action has led to public distrust in institutions. Discontent has become fertile ground for extremist narratives that threaten democracy and promote hate as a political project.
Many countries have cut cooperation programs instead of redoubling efforts to implement the Sustainable Development Goals by 2030. The available resources are insufficient, the costs are high, access is bureaucratic, and the conditions imposed often fail to respect local realities.
This is not about charity, but about addressing disparities rooted in centuries of exploitation, interference, and violence against the peoples of Latin America and the Caribbean, Africa, and Asia. In a world with a combined GDP of over US$100 trillion, it is unacceptable that more than 700 million people still suffer from hunger and live without electricity or water.
The richest countries bear the greatest historical responsibility for carbon emissions, yet it is the poorest who will suffer the most from climate change. The year 2024 was the hottest in history, showing that reality is moving faster than the Paris Agreement.
The binding obligations of the Kyoto Protocol were replaced by voluntary commitments, and the financing pledges made at COP15 in Copenhagen – promising US$100bil annually – never materialised. The recent increase in North Atlantic security organisation Nato's military spending makes that possibility even more remote.
Attacks on international institutions ignore the concrete benefits the multilateral system has brought to people's lives. If smallpox has been eradicated, the ozone layer preserved, and labour rights still protected in much of the world, it is thanks to the efforts of these institutions.
In times of growing polarisation, terms like 'deglobalisation' have become commonplace. But it is impossible to 'de-planetise' our shared existence. No wall is high enough to preserve islands of peace and prosperity surrounded by violence and misery.
Today's world is vastly different from that of 1945. New forces have emerged, and new challenges have arisen. If international organisations seem ineffective, it is because their structure no longer reflects the current reality.
Unilateral and exclusionary actions are worsened by the absence of collective leadership. The solution to the multilateralism crisis is not to abandon it, but to rebuild it on fairer and more inclusive foundations.
This is the understanding that Brazil – whose vocation has always been to foster collaboration among nations – demonstrated during its G20 presidency last year and continues to demonstrate through its presidencies of the global South grouping Brics and United Nation's environmental conference COP30 this year: that it is possible to find common ground even in adverse scenarios.
There is an urgent need to recommit to diplomacy and rebuild the foundations of true multilateralism – one capable of answering the outcry of a humanity fearful for its future.
Only then can we stop passively watching the rise of inequality, the senselessness of war, and the destruction of our own planet. — China Daily/ANN
Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva is the president of Brazil.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Israeli plan for Gaza takeover must be halted immediately, UN rights chief says
Israeli plan for Gaza takeover must be halted immediately, UN rights chief says

The Sun

time9 hours ago

  • The Sun

Israeli plan for Gaza takeover must be halted immediately, UN rights chief says

LONDON: The Israeli government's plan for a full-scale military takeover of Gaza will cause more deaths and suffering and must be halted immediately, the United Nations Human Rights Chief Volker Turk said on Friday. The plan runs contrary to the ruling of the International Court of Justice that Israel must bring its occupation to an end as soon as possible, to the realisation of the agreed two-state solution and to the right of Palestinians to self-determination, Turk said in a statement. Israel's political-security cabinet approved a plan early on Friday to take control of Gaza City, as the country expands its military operations despite intensifying criticism at home and abroad over the devastating almost two-year-old war. Earlier Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Thursday that Israel intended to take military control of the entire Gaza Strip. 'On all evidence to date, this further escalation will result in more massive forced displacement, more killing, more unbearable suffering, senseless destruction and atrocity crimes,' Turk said. 'Instead of intensifying this war, the Israeli Government should put all its efforts into saving the lives of Gaza's civilians by allowing the full, unfettered flow of humanitarian aid. The hostages must be immediately and unconditionally released by Palestinian armed groups.' - REUTERS

[UPDATED] Anwar: Malaysia will not support Israel-Palestine talks without end to genocide, violence
[UPDATED] Anwar: Malaysia will not support Israel-Palestine talks without end to genocide, violence

New Straits Times

time10 hours ago

  • New Straits Times

[UPDATED] Anwar: Malaysia will not support Israel-Palestine talks without end to genocide, violence

PUTRAJAYA: Malaysia will not support any negotiations concerning the Israeli-Palestinian conflict unless they are preceded by an immediate end to the occupation, violence, and genocide, Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim said today. "Our stance is clear: stop the violence, stop the genocide, stop the killings, and stop the occupation of Gaza and Palestine. "There can be no negotiations before that," he told reporters. Anwar was speaking to the press after the launch of the Quran Printing and Translation into the Russian Language ceremony and the launch of the Mushaf Al-Ummah Al-Jami' at the Nasyrul Quran Complex here today. Earlier today, Foreign Minister Datuk Seri Mohamad Hasan had said Malaysia wants to see the formation of an independent Palestine without any of the preconditions set out in the recent New York Declaration. Anwar questioned the absurdity of negotiating with a party responsible for ongoing atrocities. "You come into my home, seize it, kill my wife and children, and then ask, 'Can we negotiate?' That is simply not possible," he said. Anwar said the global community, including world leaders such as United States President Donald Trump, must act to halt the bloodshed and restore basic human values. "He (Trump) once supported our efforts to achieve peace between Cambodia and Thailand, and we believe it can be done, provided there is courage, determination, and principled conviction," Anwar added. The prime minister, reaffirming Malaysia's consistent position in condemning Israel's actions, called the situation a stain on global humanity and a failure of conscience. The declaration is a document outlining a plan to achieve a peaceful resolution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Developed following a high-level conference in New York co-chaired by Saudi Arabia and France, the declaration seeks to rally United Nations member states to support "tangible, timebound, and irreversible steps" towards implementing a two-state solution between Palestine and Israel.

Palestine must be free without conditions, says Tok Mat
Palestine must be free without conditions, says Tok Mat

New Straits Times

time11 hours ago

  • New Straits Times

Palestine must be free without conditions, says Tok Mat

CYBERJAYA: Malaysia wants to see the formation of an independent Palestine without any of the preconditions, as set out in the recent New York Declaration. Foreign Minister Datuk Seri Mohamad Hasan said there were no inclusive discussions on the declaration despite 122 United Nations member states endorsing it. "This is because 122 countries supported the resolution at the United Nations, including Malaysia. "But when it came to the outcome, there was no inclusive discussion involving all UN member states, whether those that supported or opposed the resolution. "We found that from the outcome, there were attachments and preconditions introduced for the establishment of an independent Palestinian state. "That is what makes us uncomfortable. Because we want a fully independent Palestinian state, full stop. No attachments, no conditions," he said to reporters at the sidelines of the 58th Asean Day Celebration here today. Mohamad said the declaration's attachments and preconditions were introduced after a roundtable discussion with about seven or eight countries Yesterday, Mohamad said in the Dewan Rakyat that Malaysia was "uneasy" with several conditions attached to the New York Declaration as they contradicted the country's foreign policy. Mohamad said Palestine should gain independence first. "After that, whoever governs Palestine is their right to decide.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store