Please accept my congratulations, Mr. President, on your election as
President of the General Assembly at its sixty-second
session. I wish you every success.
We are currently experiencing a period of
dramatic changes. Great opportunities are accompanied
by considerable risks. Global structures are changing.
States, economies and societies are becoming
networked as never before. That is what we call
globalization.
The good thing about that development is that
prosperity is increasing, and more and more people are
escaping from poverty. The challenge that that
development poses is that not everyone has their fair
share of this prosperity. There are considerable
imbalances. We thus need a global awareness, beyond
national boundaries, of our joint responsibility in order
to master the major challenges facing our world.
Climate change is undoubtedly one of the central
challenges facing humanity today. I therefore very
much welcome your decision, Mr. President, to make
climate change the focus of this year’s session of the
General Assembly. Never before have the facts been so
clear, the consensus among scientists so great or the
need for action so indisputable. Each and every country
is affected by the impact of climate change. No one
country can tackle it alone. Not to take action would
incur immense costs and cause new global conflicts.
What does that mean for the way ahead? In quite
concrete terms, it means that any contribution from
individual States or groups of States is welcome.
However, I would like to add most emphatically that
such contributions can only complement a post-Kyoto
agreement under the auspices of the United Nations.
They can never replace it.
This session of the General Assembly therefore
has to set the course for the next vital step: the climate
conference in Bali. Environment ministers will have to
agree in Bali on a clear road map so that negotiations
can be successfully concluded by 2009. There are three
key elements: a common understanding on the scale of
emissions reduction, a common understanding on fair
national contributions and a common understanding on
the instruments we should use both to protect the
climate and to foster economic growth.
The scope of the need for action is becoming
increasingly clear. We must at least halve global
emissions by the middle of the century. For this we
have a clear guiding principle: the principle of
common but differentiated responsibility.
Industrialized countries must embrace ambitious
absolute reduction targets. During the German
presidency the European Union adopted bold targets
for 2020. All industrialized countries will have to
drastically reduce their per capita emissions.
Emerging economies will first of all have to
decouple their economic growth from emissions. In the
long term, per capita emissions in both industrialized
countries and emerging economies will have to
converge at a level compatible with our global climate
protection target.
Such a process of long-term convergence offers
all countries scope to develop. It does not demand too
much of anyone. There is no doubt in my mind that
only a United Nations agreement can provide the
dependability this will require.
Climate protection will therefore be a litmus test
of the international community’s ability to act
effectively in the twenty-first century. For, on our own
continent, we Europeans know from our daily
experience that although any individual country is
too small to make a real difference together we can
achieve much.
In the light of our experience, I believe three
principles are of crucial importance to our common
future. First, economic strength and social
responsibility belong together. This principle applies
both to how States treat their citizens and to how States
treat each other. It emphasizes the right and freedom of
each individual to achieve their full potential. At the
same time, it upholds cohesion and solidarity, while
categorically rejecting isolationism and protectionism.
That is why we are seeking a balanced and
comprehensive agreement on multilateral trade. In
concrete terms, this means that we have to bring the
Doha Round to an early and successful conclusion. Too
much time has been wasted. We have to seize the last
chance for negotiations this autumn. Our aim must be
transparent financial markets and effective protection
of intellectual property, as well as minimum legal and
social standards. For I am convinced that there can be
no fair competition without common ground rules.
We can only achieve cohesion and solidarity in a
global development partnership. With the Millennium
Development Goals, the international community has
laid down binding quantifiable targets and deadlines
for the first time. Together with its EU partners,
Germany has undertaken to reach the United Nations
0.7 per cent target no later than 2015. We stand by
these pledges.
There can be no doubt that genuine partnership
places all sides under an obligation an obligation to
step up the fight against corruption, to aim for better
governance and to better protect human rights. We
want to support Africa in particular. There have been
encouraging developments on the continent but
unfortunately, also, serious setbacks, for example in
Zimbabwe.
“Growth and responsibility in the world
economy” is, therefore, also the motto guiding this
year’s German presidency of the Group of Eight (G-8).
The second principle is that we have to
strengthen the effectiveness of the United Nations. In
my view, there is absolutely no doubt the United
Nations is the place where binding joint responses can
be found to global challenges. But the United Nations
is in need of reform. This is true, above all, of the
Security Council. In many crisis situations it needs to
be able to come up quickly with universally binding
proposals. To do this, it must have international
legitimacy. However, the present composition of the
Security Council no longer reflects the world today.
There is, therefore, no alternative to adapting it to
political realities.
My country has over the past years been actively
involved in this debate. Germany is prepared to assume
more responsibility, and to take on a permanent seat on
the Security Council. What we need now are tangible
results. We are by no means only at the start of our
endeavours. The United Nations reform process has
already produced some results, such as the report of the
High-level Panel on United Nations system-wide
coherence and the establishment of the Peacebuilding
Commission.
But time is short. There are numerous crises we
have to deal with right now. And notwithstanding the
many differing factors that have led to these crises,
they all have one thing in common: they can only be
solved multilaterally. The key to ending them is unity
of purpose. This is particularly true with respect to
Iran. Iran has continuously worked on its nuclear
programme in clear contradiction of the demands of the
International Atomic Energy Agency and the United
Nations. Nobody should be in the slightest doubt as to
the dangerous nature of this programme. Iran is
ignoring Security Council resolutions. Iran is blatantly
threatening Israel.
Let us not fool ourselves. If Iran were to acquire
the nuclear bomb, the consequences would be
disastrous, first and foremost for the existence of
Israel; secondly, for the entire region; and ultimately
for all of us in Europe and the world who attach any
importance to the values of liberty, democracy and
human dignity. That is why we have to prevent Iran
from acquiring nuclear arms.
The international community must not allow
itself to be divided or have its decisive response to
Iran’s provocations undermined in any way. The world
does not have to prove to Iran that Iran is building a
nuclear bomb. Iran has to convince the world that it is
not striving towards such a bomb.
Each and every German Chancellor before me
has shouldered Germany’s special responsibility for the
existence of Israel. I, too, pledge to live up to this
responsibility that our history has bequeathed us. It is
one of the fundamental principles that guides my
country. In other words, Israel’s security is
non-negotiable for me as German Chancellor. And that
being the case, we have to do more than pay lip-service
to it. Together with its partners, Germany will continue
to seek a diplomatic solution. With this aim in mind,
Germany will if Iran does not come around
firmly advocate additional and harsher sanctions.
Unity of purpose is also the key in the fight
against international terrorism, and especially in our
efforts aimed at security and stability in Afghanistan.
Unity of purpose is also vital for ensuring a peaceful
future in Kosovo, where NATO and the European
Union play a particularly active role. We want a
solution under United Nations auspices. All parties are
now called upon to show a willingness to compromise.
We also strongly support the efforts of the Middle
East Quartet for peace in that region. Germany is a
staunch advocate of the vision of two States, within
secure borders and in peace, for the Jewish people in
Israel and for the Palestinians in Palestine. We
welcome the fact that both parties are continuing their
talks with great vigour, above all with a view to the
Middle East conference scheduled for November.
The third principle is that we have to strengthen
our shared immutable values. In my opinion, one of the
great dangers of the twenty-first century is that crises
and conflicts could give rise to a clash of civilizations.
This must not happen. For this reason, I plead for
tolerance tolerance as properly understood, not
“anything goes” masquerading as tolerance. Everybody
must be able to follow his or her own path, but it must
be a path within the international community, not
outside it.
This path is clearly departed from wherever
massive human rights violations are committed, as in
Darfur. A human tragedy is being played out there. Too
much time has already been squandered. Now is the
time to act. The crimes perpetrated there must not go
unpunished. This path has been departed from in
Myanmar, where human rights have likewise been
disregarded for years. I urge the Government not to use
force against the peaceful demonstrators and finally to
make way for a democratic future for the country. This
path is also departed from when political assassinations
are carried out, as in the case of Rafik Hariri or the
recent cowardly attack just a few days ago in Lebanon.
The Hariri tribunal must commence its work with all
possible speed. I call on Syria to grant Lebanon
diplomatic recognition at long last.
It is my fundamental conviction that we must,
time and again, muster the strength to assert our shared
values of freedom and democracy. In order to do that,
we need an unshakeable foundation.
We have such a foundation: the Charter of the
United Nations. It was written when Europe and wide
swathes of the rest of the world lay in ruins. At the
most basic level, it is a statement that, notwithstanding
all the dark chapters and tortuous turns of our history,
universal human rights do exist. In other words, what it
all comes down to is respecting and protecting the
dignity of each individual person. That is the
underlying reason why we assemble here each year and
work together for the future of our peoples.
Germany will do its utmost to advance that work.
We look forward to fruitful cooperation with all
partners in the United Nations.