Coronavirus pandemic threatens crises-ravaged communities, UN appeals for global support. Credit: United Nations
By The Rev. Liberato C. Bautista
NEW YORK, Apr 23 2020 (IPS)
Since the founding of the United Nations in 1945, space for multilateral policy development and commitment has grown. Its growth in the global health field augurs well as we find ways to mitigate the spread of the novel coronavirus.
Multilateralism is a difficult word, often misconstrued to be about the global and not the local and daily life. Perception plays a major role in how the public perceives multilateralism. This is in part due to the complexity of modern global challenges, which are well beyond the capacity of any one state or even a small group of states to resolve by themselves.
The novel coronavirus pandemic may yet change this perception.
As the saying goes, all politics is local. My rejoinder to this is that one’s local is another’s global. The local and the global are simultaneous realities. United Methodist connectionalism is akin to multilateralism.
As a church, we address social issues central to the multilateral agenda, including health, migration, peace, climate, and concerns about global poverty, trading and commerce, sustainable development, social justice, women, children and gender justice, human rights, indigenous peoples, and more.
Holistic health, healing and wholeness are intrinsic to Methodism and its Wesleyan roots. John Wesley attended to both the care for the soul and for the biological body with his abundant tips and remedies for ailments during his time.
Throughout the United Methodist connection, we are doing advocacy on public health policies at national legislatures and multilateral settings. We are in global mission together for sustainable development and humanitarian assistance, building capacity for peoples and communities to manage their healthcare needs.
Our numerous United Methodist-affiliated clinics, hospitals, colleges and universities around the world are training medical, health, social work and pastoral care professionals.
The Rev. Liberato Bautista. Credit: Marcelo Schneider, World Council of Churches
Human rights intrinsic to health, healing and wholenessGlobal pandemics such as the novel coronavirus respect no sovereign boundaries or national allegiances. The coronavirus ravages all peoples across races and social classes, but its effects are more devastating on vulnerable populations everywhere and on struggling low- and middle-income economies around the world.
To mitigate the virulent spread of COVID-19, we are called by national authorities to stay at home, wash our hands, stay in place and practice physical distancing. These public health directives imply that we have houses to stay in, water to wash our hands, and some space where we can move around and still maintain six feet distance from each other.
When Philippine government officials issued the directive for Filipinos to stay at home, Norma Dollaga, a United Methodist deaconess and justice advocate from the Philippines, reacted through her Facebook page: “Stay at home. That’s for those who have homes. How about the homeless?”
The reality is that the human rights to health, housing and water, along with human mobility, have long been imperiled in many places around the world prior to COVID-19’s onslaught. Moreover, the health crisis has been used as an excuse in other parts of the world to grab power or tighten national security laws that are assaulting civil liberties and violating democratic rights.
Neither pandemic nor political or economic exigency can derogate from the enjoyment of fundamental human rights.
That the outbreak of COVID-19 started in Wuhan City in China has resulted in undue rise in racist and xenophobic acts especially against people of Chinese origin, or Asians in general. This is on top of an ongoing surge of populism and xenophobic nationalism around the world.
Health is wealth, fund it robustly
If health is wealth, it behooves peoples and their governments to protect it. Health care workers who are on the front line against this pandemic should have all the resources they need without begging for them.
A war may have been declared in the eradication of the novel coronavirus pandemic. But it is looking more like the deployment of war rhetoric and not the funding that real wars have received.
National budgets are moral documents. Health is the true common wealth that we must invest human and budgetary resources to. Yet we know that defense spending today far outweighs the puny investments from national coffers that health care urgently needs and strategically deserves.
Global collaboration is indispensable
The role of the U.N. in forging global cooperation is crucial, in times of crisis or calm. Global cooperation in the surveillance of emerging viruses and bacteria is necessary if pandemics are to be mitigated and diseases eradicated.
Coordinating this global collaboration and leading the development of a vaccine to treat the COVID-19 disease gives the public good reason to trust global institutions like World Health Organization. Think of the eradication of smallpox — and the ongoing programs to eventually eradicate polio and malaria — as examples of how global cooperation benefits us in our local daily lives.
To triumph over COVID-19, comprehensive cooperation is needed on many fronts — medical, pharmaceutical, healthcare workers, mental health providers, healthcare facilities. Public and private coordination is necessary in ensuring that the supply chain for much needed testing kits, ventilators, as well as personal protective equipment like N95 face masks, gloves, gowns, aprons, face shields and respirators remain unbroken.
A successful multilateral response requires a “whole-of-government,” “whole-of-society” and evidence-based public health approach. Mitigation works best when countries share expertise and scientific knowledge about threats to health, to climate, to populations and to peace and security.
Social inequalities imperil public health
The Commission on the Social Determinants of Health established by WHO in 2005 elaborated on the disastrous effects of social inequalities on people’s health. The intersections of physical, mental and social health, healing and wholeness are abundantly clear.
The commission’s 2008 final report stated: “The social determinants of health are the conditions in which people are born, grow, live, work and age. These circumstances are shaped by the distribution of money, power and resources at global, national and local levels.
The social determinants of health are mostly responsible for health inequities — the unfair and avoidable differences in health status seen within and between countries.”
The U.N. commemorates its 75th anniversary this year. It is an auspicious time to reaffirm support for its mandates, especially the securing of health for all peoples and the planet. A healthy population makes for a healthy planet.
Nongovernmental organizations, including faith-based organizations like our United Methodist representations at the U.N., are in a kairos moment to help achieve the U.N.’s mandates.
COVID-19 may have been virulent and will forever change the rules of social etiquette and socialization. But the novel coronavirus has done what multilateral negotiations have not done — pause globalization and its unbridled pursuit of profit and capital.
When the world reopens from the ravages of the virus, we have a momentous task not to return to, but to transform, global and local arrangements to protect humanity and the planet, at least from the ravages of pandemics and social inequalities.
It comforts me that not all contagions are deadly. Some are beneficial. Love and kindness are. So are hospitality, mercy and justice.
*This article 0riginally appeared in UM News”. The link follows: https://www.umnews.org/en/news/collaboration-can-help-eradicate-covid-19
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The post Collaboration Can Help Eradicate COVID-19 appeared first on Inter Press Service.
Excerpt:
Rev Liberato C. Bautista is assistant general secretary for United Nations and International Affairs of the United Methodist Board of Church and Society. He also serves as president of the Conference of Non-Governmental Organizations in Consultative Relationship with the United Nations.
The post Collaboration Can Help Eradicate COVID-19 appeared first on Inter Press Service.
Neue erweiterte Fassung – die um 9.30 Uhr versandte war unvollständig!
Die wirtschaftlichen und sozialen Einschränkungen durch die Corona-Maßnahmen hat die große Mehrheit der Deutschen mit Disziplin mitgetragen. Sogar am Osterwochenende hielt sich die Bevölkerung an die weitreichenden Kontaktbeschränkungen. Doch nun wecken selektive Lockerungsmaßnahmen, also die Wiedereröffnung von vielen Geschäften und öffentlichen Einrichtungen wie Schulen, die Hoffnung auf die Rückkehr in die Normalität. Damit wächst auch die Gefahr, dass die Selbstdisziplin nachlässt. Eine seit mehr als einem Monat laufende tägliche Befragung von infratest dimap lässt erst geringe Ermüdungserscheinungen in der Bevölkerung erkennen und zeigt auch, dass rund 40 Prozent der Menschen im Land sich durch die bisherigen Maßnahmen stark eingeschränkt sehen. Die Erhebung zeigt zudem, wie die Befragten weiteren Maßnahmen wie Tracing-App und Schutzmaskenpflicht gegenüberstehen.
COPENHAGEN, 23 April 2020 – On the somber occasion of the third anniversary of the death of a member of the OSCE Special Monitoring Mission in Ukraine, senior OSCE Parliamentary Assembly officials called for an end to harassment and restrictions placed on international monitors in Ukraine, respect for principles of the Helsinki Final Act, and the restoration of Ukrainian territorial integrity.
Congressman Richard Hudson (United States), Costel Neculai Dunava (MP, Romania), and Laurynas Kasciunas (MP, Lithuania), the Chair, Vice-Chair and Rapporteur of the OSCE PA's General Committee on Political Affairs and Security, released the following statement:
“Joseph Stone, an American paramedic supporting the OSCE monitors in eastern Ukraine, was killed by a landmine in the conflict zone three years ago today. This solemn occasion must remind us of the dangers this needless Russian war of aggression imposes not only on international monitors but on innocent Ukrainian civilians on a daily basis. It is long past time for the monitors to be allowed to do their work unimpeded, for the human costs of the conflict to be addressed, and ultimately for Ukraine’s territorial integrity and sovereignty to be fully restored.”
The PA leaders underscored that restrictions on the monitors’ movement, including under the pretext of COVID-19 quarantine restrictions, were unacceptable and only served to deepen the misery of local populations by depriving them of critical assistance. They also lamented the continued toll of landmines and unexploded ordnance in eastern Ukraine.
Coronavirus en Roumanie : quand les personnels soignants jettent l'éponge
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Les dernières infos • Coronavirus dans les Balkans : nouveau foyer dans une usine textile à Kruja (Albanie)
A védekezéshez használható termékek vámkezelése során speciális, gyorsan elvégezhető eljárást dolgozott ki a NAV azért, hogy a felszerelések és eszközök mihamarabb a védekezés frontvonalába, a kórházakhoz, egészségügyi intézményekhez kerülhessenek. A termékek jelentős hányada a Liszt Ferenc Nemzetközi Repülőtér légi forgalmában érkezik Magyarországra. A NAV Repülőtéri Igazgatósága elvégzi a többségében vámmentes eljárásokat, majd a vámkezelt szállítmányok a Budapesti Intermodális Logisztikai Központ raktárépületbe kerülnek. Tovább szállításukról az Állami Egészségügyi Ellátó Központ szakemberei döntenek.
A NAV a piacfelügyeleti hatóságok segítségével gondoskodik arról, hogy egészségre veszélyes termékek és eszközök véletlenül se kerülhessenek az egészségügyi ellátó rendszerbe. Az eddig érkezett termékek között nem volt a szabványtól eltérő vagy silány minőségű eszköz, a piacfelügyeleti hatóságok minősítése szerint a termékek minden esetben megfeleltek a jogszabályoknak. Valamennyi, speciálisan rövid idő alatt vámkezelt szállítmány az állami koordinációnak megfelelően elhagyhatta a központi elosztóraktárt.
Bosnie-Herzégovine : les somuni, ces petits pains qui embaument les soirs de ramadan
Bosnie-Herzégovine : un reis de dialogue à la tête de la Communauté islamique
Bosnie-Herzégovine : voter comme le disent le curé, le pope ou l'imam
Bosnie-Herzégovine : « C'est comme la guerre, sauf qu'on ne nous tire pas dessus »
Les dernières infos • Coronavirus dans les Balkans : nouveau foyer dans une usine textile à Kruja (Albanie)
Bosnie-Herzégovine : les somuni, ces petits pains qui embaument les soirs de ramadan
Bosnie-Herzégovine : un reis de dialogue à la tête de la Communauté islamique
Bosnie-Herzégovine : voter comme le disent le curé, le pope ou l'imam
Bosnie-Herzégovine : « C'est comme la guerre, sauf qu'on ne nous tire pas dessus »
Les dernières infos • Coronavirus dans les Balkans : nouveau foyer dans une usine textile à Kruja (Albanie)