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Historic Multi-Movement Call To Action: World Must Choose Peace Over Profit, Democracy Over Destruction

Historic Multi-Movement Call To Action: World Must Choose Peace Over Profit, Democracy Over Destruction

Scoop4 days ago
As the world marks 80 years since the atomic bombings of Japan, the ITUC has joined forces with organisations for peace, climate and economic justice in a global call for a new model of common security.
The joint, multi-movement declaration warns of a growing existential threat from a 'billionaire coup' that is undermining democracy, fuelling militarism and accelerating inequality. Governments must reorient global priorities from weapons and war to social justice and human development.
ITUC General Secretary Luc Triangle said: 'Democracy is being stolen by a handful of billionaires and far-right forces, while public money is being poured into weapons instead of healthcare, education or climate solutions. This historic joint statement is a wake-up call and a call to action. We need governments to act with urgent commitments to peace, justice and dignity for all. Working people demand a world built on democracy, sustainability and shared prosperity.'
The ITUC and its allies call for:
Universal ratification of the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons, and full-scale nuclear disarmament.
Adoption of progressive and coordinated global tax reforms, including a UN Framework Convention on International Tax Cooperation.
Implementation of living wages and decent work for all, with strong labour rights and support for union organising and collective bargaining.
Reduction in global military expenditures, to redirect funds towards public services, social protection and climate action.
Creation of a United Nations Fair Conversion mechanism to support countries shifting from military-based economies to sustainable industries.
Universal expansion of social protection systems, especially for marginalised groups such as women, migrant workers and those in informal work.
Integration of disarmament and sustainability into national climate plans, ensuring military industries are part of emissions reduction strategies.
The statement also stresses the need to democratise and reform multilateral institutions, such as the UN, to place peace, human rights and sustainable development at the centre of global governance. It calls on governments at the World Social Summit to adopt the New Social Contract to tackle the root causes of inequality and conflict, while the G20 summit should align economic policies with principles of peace and sustainability by reducing military spending and investing in climate resilience and human development.
Key facts from the joint statement include:
In 2024, the top 1 per cent owned more wealth than 95% of the global population combined.
Global military spending reached $2.718 trillion in 2024, a 9.4% rise from the previous year. Low- and middle-income countries, many struggling with poverty, accounted for 35% of global military spending in 2022.
Over 100 million people are currently displaced by conflict and persecution.
Militaries collectively have the fourth largest carbon footprint in the world.
Along with the ITUC, the statement is anchored by Greenpeace International, the International Peace Bureau (IPB), the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), Oxfam and 350.org. Additional signatories include:
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Henry Puna Calls New Zealand's Involvement In Cook Islands Politics 'Improper'
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Henry Puna Calls New Zealand's Involvement In Cook Islands Politics 'Improper'

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The result, according to humanitarian officials, is that conditions for vulnerable residents who live inside Gaza remain dire – with little of the aid being sent in reaching those who need it most, while injuries and deaths are rising during attempts by the United Nations to distribute food – because Israeli troops open fire to keep swelling crowds away from the convoys and from Israeli checkpoints. The Gaza Health Ministry has recorded at least 209 deaths among people seeking aid since last Saturday, when Israel announced it would allow more food deliveries into the enclave, in part, Israeli officials said, 'to refute the false claim of deliberate starvation in the Gaza Strip'. The world's leading body on hunger crises said this week that 'the worst-case scenario of famine is currently playing out' in Gaza. At least 154 people have died of malnutrition since the start of the war, the vast majority of them in July, according to local health officials. 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When Israel came under pressure to lift the siege, it sidelined UN operations in favour of the US-backed GHF, saying that UN aid was being diverted by Hamas – a claim disputed by Western and UN officials. Today, hundreds of community kitchens and warehouses across Gaza that were once supplied by regular UN convoys have not been allowed by Israel to restart, said a UN official, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive, ongoing negotiations with Israel. Mona Qadoum, a 45-year-old mother of five in Gaza City, said she is surviving on canned lentils she saved from aid packages she received before the Israeli blockade in March. She ran out of flour, which now sells for more than US$10 ($17) for 450g, and oil, which sells for US$25 a bottle. She blamed looters for stealing aid shipments and selling them for exorbitant prices on the market. Two weeks ago, she began to beg for food. 'They say aid trucks have entered Gaza, so why hasn't any of it been distributed? 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'They say the Israeli offer will harm their neutrality, but they're the ones picking sides and then complaining about the Israeli side,' an Israeli official said. Still, the proximity of IDF positions to aid convoys means Israeli troops frequently fire toward crowds or other armed groups that are not aligned with Hamas but seek to maintain order, exacerbating the security situation, UN officials and Palestinian witnesses say. It is often difficult to discern between armed members of local clans and Hamas militants, and Israeli troops are routinely instructed to fire on any armed actors who approach aid trucks, the former Israeli military official and an Israeli special forces unit commander said, speaking on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to speak to the press. On Monday, two days before the massive mob overran the UN convoy on al-Rashid St, a similar bout of violence took place on the same coastal stretch, just blocks away, according to two witnesses. Ahmad Maher Abu al-Qarayer, a resident of northern Gaza, said armed local security forces – a combination of people working for the Government, police and local clans – ran into the IDF no-go zone about 6.30pm to arrest a gang of organised looters who had set upon a truck convoy carrying goods from the World Food Programme and even opened fire on them. Moments later, a missile from an Israeli drone struck the security forces, killing more than a half-dozen of their men, Qarayer said. 'In a moment, everything was turned upside down,' recalled Mohamed Tamous, a volunteer with the Gaza civil defence force and a paramedic who was also at the scene. Tamous was shocked, he said, because the Israelis appeared to intentionally target people securing the convoy but allowed people to 'storm in and loot the aid'. In response to questions from the Post, the IDF said it 'struck several Hamas terrorists who were waiting for aid trucks to reach northern Gaza in order to loot them', without providing proof that its targets were Hamas. 'Hamas is doing everything in its power to prevent the successful distribution of food in the Gaza Strip,' the military said. Qarayer, who witnessed the drone strike Monday, said he was 'lucky': the 33-year-old was strong enough to pull 10kg of rice from the trucks amid the carnage and run back home to his six children. 'But some people can't go to grab any aid,' he said. 'There are injured people, children and elderly people.' Despite the chaos and the danger, Qarayer said he was considering going back soon to wait for another UN convoy on al-Rashid Rd. 'I don't have any flour. Maybe I'll go back and try again,' he said. 'Whatever happens, happens.'

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