Influential former world leaders now working to promote peace, justice, and human rights warned that their mission and the joint goals of people around the world have been seriously impeded by a shift away from multilateralism in recent years, especially since President Donald Trump took office.
The Elders, the coalition founded by former South African President Nelson Mandela, suggested in a statement on Tuesday that the United States’ withdrawal from numerous international accords and institutions is sabotaging efforts to combat the climate crisis, human rights violations, nuclear proliferation, and other dangerous forces.
“Without a concerted commitment to defend multilateralism, we will not bequeath a safe world to future generations,” said the Elders, who include former Irish President Mary Robinson, former U.N. Secretary-General Ban-Ki Moon, and former Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf. “They will neither forget nor forgive such a collective failure.”
The statement comes as world leaders attend the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP 25) in Madrid, the annual climate summit which this year counts no senior White House officials among its attendees, following President Donald Trump’s steps last month to begin formally leaving the Paris climate agreement.
Trump’s “myopic and self-harming” withdrawal has left other governments, the Elders said in their statement, with no choice but to redouble their efforts to limit climate-warming fossil fuel emissions:
SCROLL TO CONTINUE WITH CONTENT