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All I Want Is UN

Bono warns UN is 'under attack' as he issues rallying call for Irish security council seat

Leo Varadkar and Mary Robinson also made speeches calling for Ireland to win a seat on the UN Security Council.

U2 in concert - New York Bono performing at Madison Square Garden EMPICS Entertainment / PA Images EMPICS Entertainment / PA Images / PA Images

U2 FRONTMAN BONO has warned that the United Nations and other international institutions including the European Union and NATO are under threat – and nations must work together to ensure their continued existence.

The singer and activist gave a sobering speech to several hundred UN diplomats and staff at an event launching Ireland’s candidacy for a seat on the powerful Security Council in 2021-22 saying “you can count on Ireland to do its part in that work”.

While Bono didn’t name any countries responsible for threatening global institutions during these “troubled times”, his words appeared clearly aimed at US President Donald Trump, who has criticised the EU and NATO.

The American leader has also pulled out of the Paris climate agreement which the singer cited, and taken aim at the World Trade Organization with new US tariffs, an institution Bono said is also under threat.

Speaking of the United Nations, Bono said: “I love that it exists, and I’ll tell you, I don’t take for granted that it exists, or that it will continue to exist because let’s be honest, we live in a time when institutions as vital to human progress as the United Nations are under attack.”

Rock and roll

He then said the EU, NATO and the Group of Seven major industrialised nations have also been threatened.

“And not just these institutions but what they stand for – an international order based on shared values and shared rules, an international order that is facing the greatest test in its 70-year history,” Bono said. “Not just these institutions but what they’ve achieved is at risk.”

On Sunday night, the Irish government invited ambassadors from the 192 other UN member nations to U2′s concert at Madison Square Garden as part of its launch for a council seat.

Bono joked yesterday evening that it was “unusual having a load of ambassadors jumping up and down at a rock and roll show”.

He told the diplomats: “At least you weren’t shouting at each other, so that was good.”

But his speech was both his sobering assessment of the state of the world and an appeal to the diplomats to back Ireland for a council seat.

Ireland is expected to be in a three-way race against Canada and Norway for two seats reserved for Western nations on the Security Council. Elections to fill the seats for a two-year term will be held in June 2020.

Bono said Ireland’s experience of colonialism, conflict, famine, mass migration “give us kind of a hard-earned expertise in these problems, and empathy and I hope humility”.

“If you look at the agenda of what the Security Council will be addressing in the coming years, doesn’t it look a lot like us?,” he asked.

Bono said he just came back from Canada and praised Prime Minister Justin Trudeau as “a remarkable leader who’s put together the most diverse Cabinet on the planet”.

“That Canada is nice is the worst thing I can say about them,” he said.

As for Norway, he said, “who could ask for a better neighbor or committed peacemaker?”

“Here’s the worst thing I can say about them, they’re tall. They’re too tall,” he said.

We bear no nation – even tall ones – any ill will.

But he said the world needs Ireland’s storytelling talents and its ability to compromise “because that’s how you achieve peace”.

Defender of human rights

Taoiseach Leo Varadkar formally launched Ireland’s campaign for a council seat at the reception on the UN’s lawn that included Irish dancing and music — but no singing from Bono.

“We see ourselves as an island at the centre of the world,” Varadkar said. “And we’re deeply aware that in an interdependent world, the great challenges of our time do not know international boundaries.”

Varadkar said Ireland’s independence in 1921 out of war and violence, and its UN membership since 1955, have led the country to be a promoter of freedom and defender of human rights.

“The United Nations is the conscience of our humanity,” he said. “In these troubled and uncertain times, as a global island we want to play our part in defending, supporting and promoting its values.”

Former president Mary Robinson also made the case for Ireland’s bid for the Security Council seat in a speech at the event, saying that Ireland understood what it stands for.

“Ireland is a bridge builder which the UN badly needs, with an empathy and an ability to understand the other,” she said.

Tweet by @IrelandUnitedNations IrelandUnitedNations / Twitter IrelandUnitedNations / Twitter / Twitter

With reporting from Sean Murray

Author
Associated Foreign Press
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