Global South Demands Reform: Kirti Vardhan Singh's NAM Push for Fair Practices

Union Minister Kirti Vardhan Singh addressed the NAM ministerial meeting in Kampala with a strong message about global challenges. He emphasized that the current global governance framework remains stuck in 1945 realities and needs urgent reform. The minister called for advancing the legitimate aspirations of Global South nations through fair economic practices. India showcased its commitment through extensive development cooperation and global initiatives like the International Solar Alliance.

Key Points: Kirti Vardhan Singh Calls for Global South Reform at NAM Meet

  • Singh calls for reformed UN Security Council to reflect current global realities
  • Urges fair trade practices and resilient global supply chains
  • Emphasizes climate justice with adequate financing for adaptation
  • Highlights India's development cooperation across 78 partner countries
3 min read

Kirti Vardhan Singh calls for fair global practices, legitimate aspirations of Global South at NAM meet

Union Minister Kirti Vardhan Singh urges NAM to advance Global South interests, push for fair trade, climate justice, and reformed multilateral institutions amid global volatility.

"Our meeting today takes place in a geopolitical landscape that is in an unprecedented state of flux. - Kirti Vardhan Singh"

Kampala, October 16

Union Minister of State for External Affairs Kirti Vardhan Singh on Thursday called for advancing the "legitimate aspirations" of the Global South and urged the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) to collectively push for fair trade, resilient supply chains, climate justice, and technological inclusivity amid growing global volatility, MEA said in its statement.

Addressing the 19th NAM Mid-Term Ministerial Meeting in Kampala, Singh said the world today faces unprecedented challenges, from climate change and debt distress to terrorism and technology divides, all of which demand united action and reformed multilateralism.

"Our meeting today takes place in a geopolitical landscape that is in an unprecedented state of flux. Challenges of climate change, debt sustainability, resilient supply chains, technological divide, trade and tariff, and terrorism have made the world extremely volatile," Singh said, adding that the current global governance framework "remains frozen in the reality of 1945."

https://x.com/KVSinghMPGonda/status/1978768623520174090

Calling for a renewed role for NAM in addressing contemporary global challenges, the minister said the movement must work to ensure "fair and transparent economic practices, a stable environment for trade, resilient supply chains, protection of global commons, and collaborative leveraging of technology for development."

He urged member states to strengthen the voice of the Global South and press for reformed multilateral institutions, including the United Nations Security Council and international financial bodies, to better reflect present-day realities.

"Climate change is a pressing concern for all of us, and we must work towards adaptation and mitigation through adequate, just, and predictable financing," he said.

The minister emphasized the need to "destigmatize the movement of skilled professionals while curbing illegal migration," noting that these steps were essential for harnessing the demographic dividend of developing nations.

Highlighting India's continued commitment to the Global South, Singh said, "As a founding member of NAM and a fellow Global South country, India has been sharing its experiences of our developmental journey with partner countries for shared prosperity."

He recalled India's extensive cooperation efforts, including development projects in 78 countries, vaccine and medicine supplies to 150 nations during the COVID-19 pandemic, and global initiatives such as the International Solar Alliance, Coalition for Disaster Resilient Infrastructure, Global Biofuels Alliance, and the Big Cat Alliance, as per MEA statement.

On the sidelines of of NAM Senior Officials (SOM) Meeting on Oct 13 in Kampala, Secretary West Ambassdor Sibi Georgemet for bilateral meetings with the heads of delegations of : Brunei, Chad, Comoros, Eritrea,Indonesia, Kuwait, Lesotho, Malaysia, South Africa, Sri Lanka, Uganda, MEA spokesperson wrote in an X post.

Further noted that, Ambassdor also met On the sidelines of the 19th mid term Ministerial of the Non Aligned Movement in Kampala, Secretary (West) @AmbSibiGeorge also met with heads of delegations of: Angola, Chad, Democratic Republic of Congo, Eswatini, Morocco, Namibia, Nepal, Palestine, Senegal and Uzbekistan.

- ANI

Share this article:

Reader Comments

R
Rahul R
Excellent points by Minister Singh. The UN Security Council desperately needs reform - it's absurd that Africa and Latin America don't have permanent representation in 2024. Time for global institutions to reflect today's reality, not 1945!
A
Anjali F
India is truly leading by example - from vaccine diplomacy during COVID to solar alliances. This is what Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam (world is one family) actually means in practice 🙏
M
Michael C
While I appreciate the sentiment, I hope these discussions lead to concrete action. NAM has often been criticized for being more talk than action. Let's see real progress on trade reforms and climate financing.
S
Siddharth J
The point about skilled professionals is crucial! So many Indian engineers, doctors, and IT professionals face unnecessary barriers while illegal migration continues. Fair mobility policies would benefit everyone involved.
N
Nisha Z
Good to see India taking leadership in NAM again. Our country has so much to offer in terms of development experience and technological solutions. Jai Hind! 🇮🇳

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50