FRANCE’S MACRON HEADS TO ALGERIA IN BID TO HEAL WOUNDS

French President Emmanuel Macron is heading to Algeria for a three-day official visit aimed at addressing two major challenges: boosting future economic relations while seeking to heal wounds inherited from the colonial era, 60 years after the North African country won its independence from France.

The visit comes less than a year after a monthslong diplomatic crisis between the two countries that stirred up post-colonial tensions and as war in Ukraine has reinforced Algeria’s status as a key partner to provide gas to the European continent.

In recent years, Macron has made unprecedented steps to acknowledge torture and killings by French troops during Algeria’s 1954-62 war of independence, in a bid to appease the two countries’ still rancorous relations. Yet the series of symbolic gestures has fallen short of an apology from France for its actions during the war — a longstanding demand from Algeria.

Macron is to meet Thursday with Algerian President Abdelmajid Tebboune at the presidential El Mouradia palace.

In a phone call with Tebboune Saturday, he said the trip will help “deepen the bilateral relationship,” according to the Elysée. He expressed France’s support after deadly wildfires in eastern Algeria.

This is the second time Macron has been to Algeria as president. During a brief stop in December 2017, he called for a “partnership between equals.” Months before that, during a trip to Algiers as a presidential candidate, he called colonization a “crime against humanity.”

Macron, who is the first French president born after the end of Algeria’s brutal seven-year war of independence in 1962, has promised a reckoning of colonial-era wrongs. The country was occupied by France for 132 years.

In 2018, Macron recognized the responsibility of the French state in the 1957 death of a dissident in Algeria, Maurice Audin, admitting for the first time the military’s use of systematic torture during the war. He later made a key decision to speed up the declassification of secret documents related to the war, amid other gestures.

Macron will have a second meeting with Tebboune on Friday in the presence of the French army chief and defense and foreign ministers to discuss peace and stability in the region, after France completed the withdrawal of its troops from Mali earlier this month. Paris still maintains troops in the broader Sahel region, with the heart of the operation moved to Niger.

Coordination with Algerian authorities is crucial as the country shares long borders in the Sahara with Mali, Libya and Niger, which are paths used by smugglers and Islamic extremists, the Elysee stressed.

No energy supply or other big trade contract is expected during Macron’s trip, but the focus will be on future economic relations, according to the Elysee.

Algeria’s status as a key gas supplier for Europe has been enhanced amid fears that Russia could cut off the pipelines. The North African country is the EU’s third-largest gas supplier, representing 8.2% of the 27-nation bloc’s imports in 2021.

Algiers has already started increasing its gas supplies to the continent, mostly via two pipelines that connect the country to Italy and Spain. It signed a $4 billion gas deal with U.S. group Occidental Petroleum, Italian company Eni and French giant Total.

Political scientist Mohamed Saidj told the AP he considers this is the most important visit by a French president since 1975, because it comes after last year’s major diplomatic crisis.

Tensions between the two countries escalated following a French decision to slash the number of visas issued to people in North Africa, including Algeria, because governments there were refusing to take back migrants expelled from France.

Relations further worsened after Algeria recalled its ambassador to France citing alleged “irresponsible comments” attributed to Macron about Algeria’s pre-colonial history and post-colonial system of government. In retaliation, Algeria accused Paris of “genocide” during the colonial era.

Both countries agreed to resume cooperation in December.

The visa situation will be discussed during Macron’s trip, the Elysee said. There are several million Algerian nationals or people of Algerian descent in France.

Last year’s tensions spread in the Algerian public opinion a feeling of hostility toward France, echoed by the authorities’ push to replace the French language at school and in public administration by English.

The Elysee said Macron will also raise human rights issues, in a country where activists criticize an unjust system of governance that views dissidents as criminals and doesn’t allow freedom of speech.

Political analyst Hassan Moali stressed that the visit “should be the occasion to clarify all issues and speak the truth. … France indeed is an economic partner, but the history issue remains key in bilateral relations.”

The French president will go Friday to the Christian and Jewish cemetery of Saint-Eugene in Algiers. He will also visit the Great Mosque.

He will then head to Oran, the country’s second largest city, where he will attend Saturday a show of breakdancing, which will become an Olympic sport in 2024 in Paris.

Source: United Nations

World reaches ‘tragic milestone’ of one million COVID-19 deaths so far in 2022

There have been one million COVID-19 deaths so far this year – a “tragic milestone” that must lead to more people being vaccinated against the disease, World Health Organization (WHO) chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus reported on Thursday.

“We cannot say we are learning to live with COVID-19 when one million people have died with COVID-19 this year alone, when we are two-and-a-half years into the pandemic and have all the tools necessary to prevent these deaths,” said Tedros, speaking during his regular briefing from Geneva.

He again urged all governments to step up action to vaccinate all health workers, older persons, and others at highest risk, as part of efforts towards inoculating 70 per cent of the global population.

Progress for priority groups

Tedros said he was pleased to see that some countries with the lowest vaccination rates are now gaining ground, especially in Africa.

In January, WHO and partners launched the COVID-19 Vaccine Delivery Partnership, focused mainly on the 34 countries that were at or below 10 per cent coverage.  All but six are on the continent.

Today, only 10 countries still have less than 10 per cent coverage, most of which are facing humanitarian emergencies. 

Vaccinations still lagging

Although welcoming progress on coverage of high-priority groups, Tedros stressed that more must be done as one-third of the world’s population remains unvaccinated. 

This includes two-thirds of health workers, and three-quarters of older persons in low-income countries.

“All countries at all income levels must do more to vaccinate those most at risk, to ensure access to life-saving therapeutics, to continue testing and sequencing, and to set tailored, proportionate policies to limit transmission and save lives. This is the best way to drive a truly sustainable recovery,” he said.

Monkeypox reversal

Meanwhile, intense Monkeypox transmission continues in the Americas region, although the number of cases globally fell by more than 20 per cent last week.

While most cases in the early stage of the outbreak were in Europe, with a smaller proportion in the Americas, the situation has now reversed.

Currently, less than 40 per cent of reported cases are in Europe and 60 per cent are in the Americas.

There are signs that the outbreak is slowing in Europe, Tedros reported, where a combination of effective public health measures, behaviour change, and vaccination, are helping to prevent transmission.

“However, in Latin America in particular, insufficient awareness or public health measures are combining with a lack of access to vaccines to fan the flames of the outbreak,” he said.

Tedros thanked vaccine manufacturer Bavarian Nordic, which on Wednesday signed an agreement with WHO’s Regional Office for the Americas to support access to its Monkeypox vaccine in Latin America and the Caribbean.

He expressed hope that the development will help to bring the outbreak under control in the region.

Source: United Nations

Opening remarks by Deputy President David Mabuza at the engagement with Traditional and Khoisan Leaders, Mangaung, Free State Province

Premier of the Free State Province, Ms Sisi Ntombela,
Morena e Moholo Moremoholo Mopeli,
Morena e Moholo Montoeli Mota,
Chairperson of the National House of Traditional and Khoisan Leaders, Nkosikazi Mhlauli, Ah! NoSandi!
Chairperson of the Provincial House of Traditional Leaders, Morena Neo Mopeli,
Marena le Mafumahadi,
Deputy Minister of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural Development, Mr Mcebisi Skwatsha,
Deputy Minister of Co-operative Governance and Traditional Affairs, Mr Obed Bapela,
Members of the Provincial Executive Council,
Mayors present,
Senior Government Officials,
Ladies and Gentlemen, 
 
We wish to take this opportunity to convey our sincere word of appreciation to you Premier Ntombela, for your warm words of welcome to this beautiful city of Mangaung, here in the Free State province.
 
Thank you for hosting this critical engagement with traditional leaders to deliberate on a range of issues affecting the standing and leadership role of traditional in development and service delivery. We also acknowledge your leadership role in fostering partnerships between the provincial government and traditional leadership institutions in the Province to ensure that the quality of lives of traditional communities are improved.
 
We thank all our revered traditional leaders for availing themselves to participate in today’s discussions. Traditional leaders are a vital cog in our democratic governance system across all spheres of government.
 
They remain central to the tasks of building safe and cohesive communities, and ensuring that our history, culture, languages, and heritage are celebrated and preserved for generations to come.
 
In the face of social ills confronting our communities, traditional leaders have an essential leadership role to play in working with government to deepen a culture of human rights for all. As leaders, you have a critical role to play in reversing the scourge of crime, gender-based violence and substance abuse within communities.
 
Working together with traditional leadership institutions, government is able to develop programmes that are responsive to challenges of unemployment, poverty and lack of key services in rural communities.
 
We must address underdevelopment and infrastructure deficits in rural communities. This requires deliberate and targeted investments in rural infrastructure networks to provide access to water and sanitation, electricity and roads that connect communities to workplaces, schools and health facilities.
 
It is common knowledge that traditional leaders have, over time, raised issues for consideration by government across a number of developmental aspects, including financial resources to build capacity of traditional leadership institutions and structures to execute their mandates. Some of the issues are currently being implemented by government, whereas others remain in the pipeline for resolution and action.
 
At the highest level of government, there is a commitment to act with a sense of urgency in resolving a number of issues that traditional leaders have raised. As part of this commitment, the President established the Inter-Ministerial Task Team chaired by the Deputy President to oversee government’s coordinated approach and response to issues affecting traditional leaders throughout the country.
 
The dialogue held with traditional leaders after the opening of the National House early this year laid an important foundation for our ongoing engagements with traditional leaders in all provinces.
 
Today’s reports and inputs will reflect on progress made on the composite list of priority issues that were raised with government. We will provide updates on progress made by various work streams established to pursue and resolve some of the sector-specific issues.
 
More importantly, we need to isolate some of the province-specific issues and map out a way to foster communication and collaboration between traditional leaders and government, including improved working relations between municipalities and institutions of traditional leadership at local levels.  
 
Among many other issues, land reform remains a critical national intervention to reverse the legacy of land dispossession, and advance restorative justice. We are committed to working with traditional leaders to expand land access beyond what is currently available, and make sure that our land reform programmes achieve the desired transformative goals in an orderly and Constitutionally-defined manner.
 
Today’s engagement occurs just two months after we held the Summit on Communal Land Administration and Tenure Reform.
 
We will reflect on the broad outcomes of this Summit in terms of how it proposes some of the key actions around communal land administration and tenure reforms. Our task today is to make inputs and enrich reports so that lasting solutions are carefully crafted.
 
We are here to engage and take your views on board to shape the future development of our traditional communities. Traditional leaders must see themselves as agents of change.
 
We look forward to your active participation and engagement as we seek solutions to prevailing challenges that confront our rural communities.  
 
I thank you.

Source: The Presidency Republic of South Africa

President Ramaphosa’s leadership on women’s, children’s and adolescents’ health recognised

President Cyril Ramaphosa met with the Right Honorable Helen Clark, former Prime Minister of New Zealand, and Board Chair of the Partnership for Maternal, Newborn and Child Health (PMNCH), to discuss the need for leaders to urgently address the reversals being witnessed in the health and well-being of women, children and adolescents.

These reversals have been exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic and other compounding crises, such as increasing incidences of conflict and the climate emergency.  

President Ramaphosa and Rt Hon Helen Clark met today, Thursday, 25 August 2022.

Half-way toward the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), the world is at a point where instead of working towards closing the gender equity gap, decades of progress are being rolled back, with women’s and girls’ fundamental rights and health under threat. 

PMNCH is the world’s largest alliance for women’s, children’s and adolescents’ health and well-being, partnering with sovereign states and over 1,300 partner organizations, hosted by the World Health Organization. The mission of PMNCH is to “mobilise, align and amplify the voices of partners to advocate for women’s, children’s and adolescents’ health and well-being, particularly the most vulnerable.”
 
The President and Rt. Hon. Clark explored opportunities to undertake high-level political advocacy and strategic interventions to amass political, financial, and programmatic commitments from all sectors of society, including the private sector, critical to delivering on the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. This includes the SDG 3 targets for women’s, children’s and adolescents’ health, especially in the face of the toxic combination of COVID-19, escalating gender-based violence, economic instability, the climate crisis and conflicts. 
 
South Africa’s leadership is anchored in a set of commitments by the government to implement various programs at the country level that address service delivery, financial resourcing, nutrition, HIV prevention and youth empowerment. 
 
Says President Ramaphosa: “I was impressed with the way the PMNCH sought to elicit our commitments for our people first because indeed charity begins at home. I hope that as Head of State, I can  build confidence in our ability to positively impact these vulnerable population groups by sharing the models being implemented across the Republic of South Africa, exchanging best practices, and mobilizing other champions to galvanise greater action, thereby elicit lasting commitments for real change in the lived experience of our women, adolescents and children.” 

The Right Honorable Helen Clark met with President Ramaphosa to invite President Ramaphosa to engage closely with PMNCH to shape the agenda for the Partnership at the highest political levels. “We are deeply honored that President Ramaphosa has agreed to support this critical agenda as we need urgent and transformative action to reverse these worrying trends. This will help drive the much-needed political will behind issues that impact on outcomes for women, children and adolescents. At PMNCH, we are committed to working alongside the President to position this agenda so that action is taken to get back on track towards achievement of SDG3. “At this time when compounding crises are rolling back previous progress made on women’s empowerment and the health of communities,” she said.

Source: The Presidency Republic of South Africa

Alhassan Alidu is uplifting the Moore language by bringing it online

Alhassan Alidu is truly putting in the work to bring the Moore language into the digital world. Moore is one of two official regional languages in Burkina Faso, Africa. It is spoken primarily by Mossis such as Alhassan. The Mossi people make up the largest ethnic group in Burkina Faso, with around 6 million Mossi currently living within the country and more living elsewhere in countries such as Ghana and Côte d’Ivoire.  In 1896, the French colonized Burkina Faso, and remained there until independence in 1960. Due to this, French is technically the official language of the country. Moore is more widely spoken, but, as Alhassan points out, the legacies of colonization act as barriers to the digital implementation of Moore and other regional languages.

As the executive director of the Moore Wikimedia Community, Alhassan is providing Moore with a digital platform that exists in the face of dominating Western media and languages (e.g. French and English), and allows for a larger and more accessible diffusion of the language. He has also created a YouTube page with helpful resources detailing how to use Wikimedia, as well as an Instagram account that provides language tips and highlights the contributions of Moore Wikimedia members. You can follow Alhassan on Twitter at @Hasslaebetch and the Moore Wikimedia Community at @Moore_Wikimedia. With these resources, Alhassan hopes to provide the Moore language with a permanent digital presence that can be used by the Moore community throughout the world and for years to come.

Rising Voices (RV): Please tell us about yourself and your language-related work.

Alhassan Alidu (AA): I am Alhassan Alidu, my username is Hasslaebetch, and my Twitter handle is @Hasslaebetch. I am a Moore (Mossi) by tribe and I speak Moore, Dagbani and English. Burkina Faso is the homeland of my parents but they relocated to Ghana and so I was born in Ghana and as such I am a Ghanaian by nationality. I edit in Dagbani and Moore. Even though I have not studied Moore in my university education, it behooves me to assist my language to come on deck in the digital space. I collaborate with language experts so that our mother tongue can also have a space at the right time in the digital environment. My experience in editing in Dagbani gave me the zeal to forge ahead to reaching a goal possible together with the Moore community and the Moore people at large.

RV: What is the current state of your language both online and offline?

AA: There are many factors hindering the existence of the Moore language in digital spaces. Online, the language is unheard — this is as a result of French and English barriers. Moore is largely spoken in Burkina Faso but Burkina Faso is a Francophone country — they speak more of French than English — and as a result the language is lost in the English digital space. Moore speaking people in surrounding countries like Ghana make better use of the English language than French. Offline, there is a lot of progress in archiving the language in books and magazines. Lots of writers have emerged and they have done a lot of work on the language. Hopefully, these writers will translate that into the digital space for generations yet unborn to fully utilize the language.

RV: What are your motivations for seeing your language present in digital spaces?

AA: My motivation is driven by my passion to put the language in the limelight so that it will be accessible to those who are far from the indigenous speakers and still want to learn or continue to get in touch with their mother language. Future generations must not lose the quality of the language as a result of our negligence to duly archive the language. The digital space gives a very good environment for one to be able to preserve his/her language, culture and national identity. All these elements give relief and motivation to me for seeing my language present in the digital space. But beyond this, one can be sure that future generations would work tirelessly to improve upon the content being published in Wikipedia and all its sister projects.

RV: Describe some of the challenges that prevent your language from being fully utilized online.

AA: Lack of understanding of one’s language can discourage a person from trying to utilize the language. Most people do not see reasons why they need to learn their language because the language is not used in any official communication with the state agencies. Additionally, the French/English mix is somewhat challenging. Some Moore speakers also speak either English or French. As these languages are international languages, they are given much more priority than the Moore language. African countries colonized by the Western world adopted foreign languages as the means of all official communication to the government and all government establishments. The media and privately owned enterprises do not make use of the local language. This resulted in a reduction in interest in speaking the local language to children by parents and as a result, the coming generations are gradually losing their language.

RV: What concrete steps do you think can be taken to encourage younger people to begin learning their language or keep using their language?

AA: In this globalized world, being able to speak your native language is something that we need to value. Speaking the language frequently and studying the language will enable one to master the language and have the zeal to utilize it. Inability to speak a good language doesn’t encourage the speaker to speak. People normally will always speak the language they are fluent at rather than what may be challenging to speak. People must find entertainment in the language they speak. Media houses like TV stations, radio stations must have programs that would entertain people in their dialects. Movies, music, poems and news items could have sessions of local language for people to have the zeal in learning the language. Language courses could also be organized for interested people or it could be added to the curriculum to aid learning the language. More so, online tools could be developed to assist people to practice short phrases, learn new vocabulary and even try pronunciation and subsequent speaking.

Source: Global Voices

Key points of Minister of Foreign Affairs Nikos Dendias’ remarks at a conversation with students and alumni of the Harvard Kennedy School of Government (Athens, 25.08.2022)

Thank you so much for the opportunity; it is really a great pleasure for me to meet future leaders of this world.

The one thing we need more than anything else in this world now, is human capital. So young talented people that care about humanity, care about the world is, I think, the number one issue we should address.

Having said that, I also thank you for the honor of coming to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and having this discussion.

Well, Greece is a medium-sized European democracy with a huge history, important history.

I will just give you a very quick overview; I am seeing the Greek foreign policy as the symbol of the Olympic Games with intersecting circles.

Circle number one is our European neighborhood, mainly partners within the European Union, but also, obviously, the United Kingdom.

Second circle is to our south. It’s rather a big circle and an expanding circle, it is the Middle East, it is the Gulf and it is also North Africa and Sub-Saharan Africa. We see these too as] quite well connected with our neighborhood.

In Northern Europe, if you have the same discussion in Brussels, many people see the Mediterranean as a border. That has never been the case in history. The Mediterranean has always, since Ancient Greek times, been a bridge.

And why am I saying that? Because many challenges now come from Africa and especially Sub-Saharan Africa, and we have to pay very close attention to that bridge.

A third circle is the Balkans, especially now, the Western Balkans. Greece has been extremely successful in helping the Eastern Balkan countries become members of the European Union. The Western Balkans is a challenge; difficult cases, no way for stability, peace and prosperity unless they eventually come into the European family.

Fourth, extremely important for us, the United States, our number one military ally for the last half century. Our relations with the United States are now at an all-time high.

I have myself signed two Agreements with the United States, and also we cooperate very closely, even in the current crisis we are facing after the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

The fifth circle is what we call “beyond the horizon”, which means East Asia. I was a few weeks ago in Phnom Penh signing an Agreement with the ASEAN; Vietnam, for us a very important country, China, an extremely important country for Greece as well, a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council.

But also, the rest of Africa; Africa is the fastest expanding continent in the world economically but also population-wise; South and Central America.

There is a sixth circle, which has to do with issues. On top of this circle, for us there are two things: International Law, a rules-based order- and the environment.

There are other things as well. For example, the Francophonie. We have been members for years, we have a very active role in the Francophonie. The Lusophony, the countries who speak Portuguese. We have signed an agreement with them.

But also, the environment; we care a lot, we care dearly. We are a conservative government but we think that unless we address the challenge of the environment, all the other challenges mean nothing. We destroy our world as we proceed.

I am going to meet Secretary Kerry, on Sunday, he is coming to Athens. We are organizing in consultation] with the United States the “Our Ocean Conference 2024” to help preserve the maritime environment. We care a lot, we are the biggest merchant maritime power in the world.

But also, on the issue of International Law, we are conducting three campaigns in the United Nations because we would like to be relevant, we would like to advocate for international law.

We are trying to be elected to the United Nations Security Council for 2025-2026. We would like to become a member of the Human Rights Council for 2028-2030, and also, we would like to get the Presidency of the General Assembly early in the next decade.

So, that’s a very concise presentation of what we are trying to do. But I am looking forward to your open questions and I will try to answer them the best way I can.

Again, I am really thankful for the opportunity you gave me.

QUESTION: Minister, thank you so much for meeting us today, it’s a great honor.

There are a few of us in the room who are very interested in U.S. foreign policy and who will actually join the U.S. Foreign Service as diplomats upon graduation and -we posed this question to a few of the leaders we’ve already met-  but I am just curious as to what your thoughts are as to how the U.S. can better support Greece and its future endeavors, including joining the Human Rights Council,  U.N. Security Council, and why you think that’s something the United States’ foreign policy objective should focus on, in this relationship.

N. DENDIAS: Thank you.

We are very happy with the Greek-US relations. It has never ever been that good. But having said that, that does not mean we cannot do more.

And we are very much aligned with the U.S. foreign policy on the approach to a rules-based society. We believe that a revisionist policy, no matter who is the actor, has no place in this world. The strong one cannot impose its views and its opinion on the weak one. That’s not the world we aspire to create.

We are not in the 16th century anymore. Humanity has struggled for centuries to get beyond the Machiavellian approach to international politics.

So, what we would like from the United States is to support medium and smaller countries to become more involved on the international stage on this agenda, on the agenda of International Law.

And we believe that -if I am reading the United States Constitution well- that serves the American long-term interest as well. Because the main part of the American foreign policy throughout the ages was in favor of the rules-based international order, in favor of principles and in favor of ideals.

So why not subscribe to this effort by a country that was the first country that created democracy in this world.

Thank you.

QUESTION: Thank you again, Minister, for hosting us.

The question I have is what do you think is relevant for countries such as Greece when you are dealing with asymmetric relations with countries that are larger in terms of positioning their national interest in the global sphere?

N. DENDIAS:  When I first came here, I was initially thought that problems are solvable when you treat them in a rational way. If you understand the interest of the other side and you accept, you respect what is legal and you act accordingly. And I couldn’t have been proven more wrong in the case of our big neighbour, Turkey.

Because all these three years I have to tell you we are living under a constant crisis with ups and downs, but all this time our relations with Turkey have been crisis at a crisis level. And that has never been the case after 1974.

After 1974 –1974 was the Turkish invasion of Cyprus– we had ups and downs, crises, very big crises, but then there was almost immediately a de-escalation. In this case, in all the three years, we are facing a constant deterioration of this.

And I will show you why, and what is the basic reason. I can show you a few maps. This is a turkish map, you see where the dividing line is and you see that Crete is also colored red.

Now, if Turkey starts from that point of view, how can we ever have a good understanding with Turkey? I suppose it is quite similar to President Putin’s dreams of how an “acceptable” Ukraine would look in the future. No.

If you think I am exaggerating this is called «the Blue Homeland», in Turkish “Mavi Vatan”, the idea that Turkey is entitled to what is painted blue.

And just to prove to you that we are not daydreaming; this is President Erdogan speaking in front of that map to the cadets of the Turkish Naval Academy.

So, I have to say, in my humble opinion, the problems we are having with Turkey and the problems smaller countries have with bigger countries are solvable. But the way to solve them and the way to address them is to accept a common set of rules.

And what are the rules? They are not rules by choice, they are not rules a la carte, it is international law. And this case is international law of the sea.

If we both accept this as the basis of our discussion our problems are very easily solvable. And we have a huge respect for our bigger neighbor. But if, for example, we are trying to solve a geometry exercise together and you are implementing Euclidean geometry in which parallels exist, and I am implementing para-elliptical geometry in which parallels do not exist, how can we ever solve this exercise together? We will never do that.

So, the answer is smaller countries and bigger countries have to accept international law if we would like humanity to progress.

QUESTION: Foreign Minister, I wanted to maybe touch on ring number 5 and number 6 of your presentation, which is around Africa, the broader emerging world, and ring number 6 which is around international law and climate change which you mentioned. And I think one of the questions I have is around meeting the long-term commitments that have been made for climate change to the developing world, this 100 billion dollar commitment that’s been made for climate change mitigation and financing.

And how you see at your level and also at European level these commitments being met in light of the challenges that we are seeing on the energy side and the inflation side. Also, because I think what the Prime Minister highlighted to us two days ago is the end of enhanced surveillance for Greece in terms of the fiscal side. So, I am imagining that one of the things that Greece wants to do is really step out into the world and show leadership, I think, especially on the climate change side.

So I just wanted your thoughts about how you are approaching the forthcoming COP27 meeting which is being hosted in Africa which has parallel to ring number 5 of your presentation.

N. DENDIAS: Thank you. First of all we are very happy that Egypt is hosting in Sharm El-Sheikh the COP. As I told you before, for us Africa is extremely important.

But you also addressed this through another angle that is extremely interesting, and this is the economic situation around the world after the Russian invasion.

We are having at the same time two huge challenges.

The first one is climate change which, honestly speaking, is getting beyond control.

So, we have to address this phenomenon or we will destroy humanity. And huge resources have to be used. And, I have to say, 100 billion is too small an amount and I am stating the obvious.

At the same time, because of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, we have the huge raise of energy prices, reignition of inflation – which we have forgotten for the 4-5 last decades – and need to re-address the internal balances in the European societies and in western countries, societies and democracies. Where, at the same time, we have the problem of internal inequality, which is again a problem which disrupts the normal functioning of a democratic society.

You cannot throw one part of your population under the poverty line. You have to help them, that is the meaning of the modern state and the modern society.

And in order to address one challenge you are opening yourself to problems in the effort to address the other challenges. And I am sorry to say: there are no quick fixes on this.

In my humble opinion, the best thing democracies can do is to be absolutely open towards the societies on how huge the challenges we are facing are and prepare our societies, for what is coming. Because this is not going to be easy.

QUESTION: Thank you, for having us today. I was wondering if you can walk us through the process of essentially balancing out your allies and the priorities. That would be the US, China, Iran. How do you serve a balance of priorities between very important allies to you.

N. DENDIAS: And I think for China, Greece is an important country.

I have served a few times as a Minister of a small-medium sized country. Yet again, I have seen President Xi three times in my life. That cannot be by coincidence. It is clear that in the Chinese Silk Road map Greece has a role.

And China for us is important because China has invested in Greece in the time of crisis in the Piraeus port. And also, China is a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council. Because of the challenges we are facing we need good relations with all the United Nations Security Council members.

Having said that, for us it is clear where we belong. We belong to the western world, we belong to the world of democracies, we are a proud member of NATO since the early ‘50s, and we are a strong and committed ally of the US and a member of the European Union.

So, Chinese investments and good relations with China in a rules-based international order are more than welcome.

In Phnom Penh, I met Minister Wang Yi and I am going to Beijing this autumn. We will continue cultivating our relationship with China.

But that does not mean that we will ever, under any circumstances, compromise our values, our principles and our allies.

QUESTION: Minister, thank you so much for your time. I’d like to ask you about the current energy crisis. On one hand, this winter, threatens to stress a lot of relations between EU countries. So, I’d be curious about what you see as challenges and the foreign policy approaches to mitigating some of these stresses.

And on the other hand, Greece is under construction on the new LNG terminal and is potentially set to be a center point for importing energy into the greater European area.

So, where do you see the opportunities from this current crisis as well?

N. DENDIAS: There are a number of issues that work to our advantage. Number one, is our geographical position, we don’t have that cold winters. Number two, our level of imports, energy imports from Russia are not that big. But that is not the case for most of our European friends and partners.

And on the other hand, we are adamant on issues of principle, on the Russian invasion of Ukraine. We have implemented all packages of sanctions and we will continue doing so, we will continue to help Ukraine.

For us, it is more difficult than it sounds, because historically we had a close relationship with Russia. The Russian fleet was one of the three fleets that defeated the Ottoman fleet and was the turning point in the Greek war of independence. But again, principles are principles.

The invader cannot ever be accepted as something that for us is a matter of discussion.

The clever thing we have done in the past, you were kind enough to mention it in your question, is not only balancing our imports but also creating sources for LNG. And we have the Revithousa LNG terminal which is right next to Athens. But also, we have Alexandroupolis which is the second entry point.

And as you see on the map, the distance between Alexandroupolis and Odessa it is smaller than the distance to the straits of Bosporus to Odessa.

Alexandroupolis, which is part of the two Agreements I have signed with the United States, is potentially the main entry point for energy in Central and Eastern Europe. Distance-wise it is much closer, for example, to Vienna than Rotterdam.

So, we have really chosen wisely, or reality has proven us right in creating alternative sources. But of course, this needs a lot of pipelines and other projects that are progressing as we speak.

But at least the right choices have been made before this crisis.

QUESTION: Thank you, Minister, again for taking the time to speak with us today.

One of the core cases that they teach all the HKS and PP1 students is about the Syrian refugee crisis and giving that, you know, the impact of climate change will affect not only the environment but also conflict, food security, therefore drive greater migration and we also see that geopolitical tensions would drive migration as well, we saw that with the invasion of Ukraine.

So, my question relates to how do you think Greece, the European Union and the international community as a whole must work together to deal with issues of forced migration.

N. DENDIAS: Yes, that’s also an interesting one.

I will add up to what you say. Something that was not part of the challenge we were facing before is the instrumentalization of migration, using migration as a weapon.

And we have seen that in two cases in recent years, one by Turkey against us and the European Union in 2020 where thousands of people were literally pushed towards the European border. And also, by the Lukashenko regime in Belarus sending people to Lithuania, again, in order to blackmail Lithuania and the European Union.

And those two are partly interconnected, I’ll give you an example. When we saw the Lithuanian crisis evolving, we were trying to figure out how migrants would arrive in Belarus. Because Belarus is not the obvious destination of migrants coming from Africa or from Asia, Central Asia etc.

And we realized that there were 35 flights per day from Turkey to Belarus. Suddenly it seems that Belarus became the favorite tourist destination from the Ataturk airport and the new airport in Istanbul.

So, we have to address the challenge of the instrumentalization of migration. At the same time, we in the European Union are very proud because we have a regime of protecting human rights and that is at the core of what the European project is.

So, if we compromise that, then we compromise the whole project and it’s a very fine balancing act not always easy to make, because we are speaking about huge numbers. Europe has now to address hundreds of thousands, million cases per year.

So, we have to find a balance between protecting our borders, protecting our societies, not allow instrumentalization of the effort of poor people to gain a better future and at the same time preserve human rights.

And if I have to say what is the top priority; is always human rights. At the end of the day that’s what it is.

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Thank you so much Minister, it was an honor.

N. DENDIAS: Thank you. I am sure it was not an honor, I hope it was a small pleasure.

Source: Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Hellenic Republic