UN deputy chief calls for major arms spending cuts and urgent action to save SDGs
High-Level Political Forum (HLPF) on sustainable development convened at UN
The UN Deputy Secretary-General on Monday urged global leaders to redirect resources from warfare to peace and sustainable development initiatives.
Speaking on behalf of Secretary-General António Guterres, Amina Mohammed called for immediate and decisive action to salvage the faltering Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
“Conflicts in Gaza, Sudan, Ukraine, and beyond are causing a devastating loss of life and diverting political attention and scarce resources from the urgent work of ending poverty and averting climate catastrophe,” she said at the ministerial meeting of the High-Level Political Forum (HLPF) on sustainable development.
She emphasized the need to slash military budgets and instead channel funds towards peace and development.
Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed addressing the ministerial opening of the High-level Political Forum.
Critical stage of SDGs
Highlighting the critical state of the SDGs, Ms. Mohammed noted that only 17 percent of the targets are on track as the 2030 deadline approaches.
“Future generations deserve more than 17 percent of a sustainable future,” she emphasized, outlining a four-pronged strategy for urgent acceleration in a bid to meet the 2030 deadline for the Goals.
The first step, she stressed, is to establish peace, underscoring that political and financial resources should be redirected from conflicts to development efforts.
She also emphasized the importance of advancing green and digital transition, urging nations to enhance their climate action plans by 2025, aligning them with the 1.5-degree Celsius limit in line wit the Paris Agreement and invest in expanding digital connectivity.
Invest in peace
Addressing the financial challenges impeding SDG progress, Ms. Mohammed pointed out the growing financing gap and destabilizing financial conditions in many developing countries.
She acknowledged ongoing reform of multilateral development banks and the recycling of special drawing rights but called for more robust measures.
“We must go further and faster to deliver an SDG Stimulus,” she urged, calling for increased lending capacity, expanded access to contingency financing, and comprehensive debt solutions.
Keep the promise
In conclusion, Ms. Mohammed reiterated the SDGs’ promise to “leave no one behind”.
She emphasized the need to prioritize vulnerable populations, uphold the rights of persons with disabilities and combat gender inequality.
“Achieving this agenda means placing vulnerable people and groups at the forefront of national development plans, policies and budgets,” she said.