Russia’s war in Ukraine has left many communities facing catastrophe. In a world already wracked by multiple crises such as searing inequality and escalating climate change, this conflict is tearing through communities.
Millions of people are directly affected. They face fragile circumstances, with immeasurable sadness caused by the death of loved ones, loss of livelihoods, displacement, destruction of homes, interruption of education, and more.
The conflict has also placed huge new burdens on the multilateral system, putting a further break on progress towards the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals that has already been set back by the negative impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Civil society representatives from both Ukraine and Russia have expressed their deep concerns about the needless suffering caused by the war. In Ukraine, they are responding to the situation in vital ways, from documenting war crimes and gathering information about missing persons to urging international institutions to live up to their responsibilities on peace and accountability.
In Russia, civil society has exposed media restrictions that have helped create a disinformation nightmare while protesting against the injustice of war.
The impacts of this conflict are being felt far beyond the war zones. Disruptions in international commerce are feeding inflation and food insecurity around the world disproportionately impacting the impoverished and excluded.
In this scenario, civil society groups across all continents have come together to support a five-point call for action issued by the Action for Sustainable Development coalition.
The message to the international community is simple:
We call for an immediate end to the war in Ukraine, a ceasefire and a withdrawal of Russian forces, and the phased removal of all sanctions according to an agreed timeline. The devastation of many cities and the killing of innocent civilians and civilian infrastructure cannot be justified.
Furthermore, it is unacceptable and insufficient that so far only a handful of men – and visibly no women – appear to have been involved in the peace negotiations.
We call for the peace negotiations to include civil society and representatives of those who are directly affected, especially from Ukraine and Russia, and particularly women.
We stand in solidarity with the people of Ukraine. The rights of civilians must be respected. After more than a month of conflict, the humanitarian impacts are leading to massive displacement of people, loss of lives and livelihoods. We are very concerned that this grave violation of international law will have an extremely adverse impact on security and democracy in Europe and the world.
We also call for human rights to be respected in Russia. Many Russian people have stood up to condemn violence and their voices must be heard. Peaceful protest must be recognised as a legitimate form of expression.
We call for human rights to be fully respected in Ukraine and Russia, including international humanitarian rights and civic freedoms.
The rise in militarism and conflict is not limited to Russia. It is part of a growing catalogue of armed conflict. Violence in all its forms – authoritarianism, corruption and indiscriminate repression – affects the lives of millions of people around the globe and violates the human rights of people young and old in countries including: Afghanistan, Brazil, Central African Republic, Colombia, El Salvador, Ethiopia, Guatemala, Myanmar, Nicaragua, Palestine, South Sudan, Syria and Yemen, to name just a few.
These conflicts often affect communities already living with fragile infrastructure and the devastating impacts of climate change. All conflicts must be treated with the same level of concern. The lives of everyone affected by conflict are of equal value.
We call for the same level of support to end conflicts and ensure financial support for displaced peoples and refugees from all conflicts.
The war in Ukraine has already had a devastating impact on the world economy, especially on global south countries. There are likely to be major disruptions and significant increases in the costs of energy and production, and increased food costs. At the same time budgets are being redirected towards military spending.
The militarism of Russia is fuelled by fossil fuels and it is therefore critical to halt investment in fossil fuels and shift immediately to renewable forms of energy. It is crucially important that we reduce oil and gas consumption and rapidly scale up investments in renewables in order to combat the climate crisis, and that we do so immediately.
We call for a specific commitment at the UN to reduce spending on military conflicts and to reinvest this spending on social protection and clean energy.
We call on member states to remember the founding vision of the UN and its Security Council, to deliver on the main reason it was created: to avoid any kind of war and the suffering of humankind.
The 2030 Agenda sets out a path towards a peaceful, just, sustainable and prosperous world. much more ambitious steps and actions must be undertaken to ensure that its targets and goals are met.
We call on member states to establish a global peace fund to strengthen the role of international mediators and peacekeepers. The UN must act!
The international community cannot be a bystander in Ukraine or any other conflict. We all have a responsibility to defend universal human rights and humanitarian principles by acting against cruelty and injustice wherever it may be.
All comments [ 20 ]
Recalling the violation of the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Iraq, Afghanistan and Libya by the United States and the West under the pretext of international peace and security, he said that it is “absurd” for such countries to mention respect for sovereignty and territorial integrity in the context of the Ukrainian situation.
This is a crisis for all of us, and we all must speak out for diplomacy and support this resolution
The international community has the responsibility to speak out, “lest our silence be misconstrued as consent”.
Amid widespread condemnation of continued bombing and shelling across Ukraine that has seen more than 500,000 civilians fleeing the violence, some delegates shared their own experiences with war, recalling the horrors that faced their citizens.
Many delegates announced pledges of humanitarian assistance to help the people of Ukraine, with some neighbouring States saying they were ramping up border capacities to swiftly help those fleeing the violence.
All cases of discrimination will be investigated and perpetrators held accountable.
The Charter has been thrown out the window when it has suited powerful States, Ghana’s delegate stated that: “Across this hall and throughout our Organization’s history, there is enough blame to go round.”
Do these developments fit together, and what are the right answers to the security policy issues of this century?
every tenth of a degree reduction in global warming is a contribution to human security”
Looking at the developments in recent years shows that a purely military response without an overall concept certainly cannot be the right answer.
The concept of human security and a national security strategy must not be based on a purely militarised concept of security.
In response to this turning point – as heralded by Russia’s aggression – much more needs to be invested in the security of country in order to protect freedom, democracy and prosperity.
There is therefore a strong tendency to focus more on military security and strength on the national and European level – while obscuring the fact by using terms such as “peace facility”.
Climate justice is only possible when there is peace, they say, pushing for an end to fossil fuel wars in other parts of the world as well.
We are youth climate activists usually fighting a crisis we didn’t cause, now finding ourselves at the frontlines of a war we didn’t start
Most of the media coverage of Putin’s attack on Ukraine frames the war in terms of a geopolitical border dispute, or one tyrant’s quest to reclaim part of Russia’s former imperium.
Modern war is almost always a fight for fossil fuels, and it’s a fight that kills some immediately with bombs and bullets and may ultimately kill the rest of us from catastrophic impacts of climate change.
“We were thinking, Why is it happening here? And we found that it’s really simple. Putin wants money, so he needs fossil fuels.”
Fossil fuels cause climate change, and now we can clearly see they also cause wars.
It’s impossible to talk about the climate crisis right now but the war is only escalating the crisis, and speeding up the time until doomsday.
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