Trump on 'wrong side of history' on climate: Ban Ki-moon
24/10/17
|
Former U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon |
'I am deeply concerned about what President
Trump has declared that the U.S.
is withdrawing from this Paris
agreement.'
U.S. President Donald Trump is "standing on the wrong side
of history" in withdrawing from the Paris
climate accord, former U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon told AFP in London on Monday.
"I am deeply concerned about what President Trump of (the)
United States has declared that the U.S. is withdrawing from this Paris
agreement.
"I have been speaking out that his vision is politically
short-sighted, and economically irresponsible and scientifically wrong. So he
is standing on the wrong side of history," Ban said on the sidelines of a London peace walk.
The former Secretary-General of the United Nations joined other
members of The Elders, a group created by Nelson Mandela, on the procession
through the city before a discussion on world peace.
Ban said despite Trump's decision to pull out of the historic Paris agreement, he remained heartened by a U.S. civil
society campaign to continue to honour the environmental deal.
"I am encouraged and hopeful that whole worlds will be
united in moving ahead with this Paris
climate change agreement. This is the political and moral responsibility of our
political leaders," he said.
Trump announced in June the start of a three-year process to
pull out of the 2015 agreement, signed by 195 countries, on the grounds that it
would put the U.S.
at an economic disadvantage.
Reflecting on the broader political climate, Ban said he had
been "working very closely" with Trump's predecessor Barack Obama,
who last week criticised the "politics of division" which
characterised the 2016 U.S.
presidential race.
Ban also decried the current "lack of commitment" to
an international spirit.
"A lack of leaders' global vision that we are living in a
very tightly-interconnected small world, and that whatever is happening in this
country may affect the neighbouring countries and even all around the
world," he said.
He cited the "very tense period" on the divided
Korean peninsula -- with Pyongyang
staging its sixth nuclear test and launching two intercontinental ballistic
missiles -- as one area where world leaders needed to act collectively.
"As one of the Korean citizens, I'm very much committed
that the whole international community should stand resolute and unified and
strong voices, so that North
Korea realises that there is no other way
but to return to dialogue to address these issues," he said
All comments [ 0 ]
Your comments