Leaders urged to alleviate inequality

World’s most respected charity leaders including Graça Machel, widow of the late South African statesman Nelson Mandela, Archbishop Desmond Tutu, the rock star Bono, the Nobel peace prize winner Muhammad Yunus, in a joint letter urged British Prime Minister David  Cameron to act swiftly to alleviate global inequality to stem military conflicts across the world.

A child stands in the snow at a refugee camp in Bekaa Valley, in eastern Lebanon, after a snowstorm. The United Nations and its humanitarian partners are ramping up aid efforts for the more than 800,000 Syrian refugees in Lebanon who were shivering through rains, snowfall and freezing temperature as a fierce winter storm moves across the region.
A child stands in the snow at a refugee camp in Bekaa Valley, in eastern Lebanon, after a snowstorm. The United Nations and its humanitarian partners are ramping up aid efforts for the more than 800,000 Syrian refugees in Lebanon who were shivering through rains, snowfall and freezing temperature as a fierce winter storm moves across the region.EU 

The joint letter said unless world leaders made 2015 a year for development, the consequence would not just be poverty but also growing military conflicts from which the rich would be unable to protect themselves for decades to come. It is Machel’s first global political act since the death of her husband last year.The letter to Cameron has also been signed by Archbishop Desmond Tutu, the rock star Bono, the Nobel peace prize winner Muhammad Yunus, the billionaire entrepreneur Mo Ibrahim and the 17-year-old Pakistani activist Malala Yousafzai, The Guardian reported.

The letter presses the prime minister to take the lead on an international UN framework agreement on climate change in 2015, and to secure an agreement on new tighter UN millennium development goals, an issue on which he took a personal lead last year.

The letter coincides with the anniversary of Mandela’s birthday – and also the day on which the current stage of negotiations on replacing the millennium development goals is due to close.At present there is little sign of progress on the goals, with signs that there will be an increase in the number to 17 and a proliferation in targets to 145. That number is widely seen as unwieldy.

The joint letter warns: “A growing insecurity caused by unequal access to increasingly scarce natural resources leads to tragic conflicts from which nobody – no elite, no matter how rich – can hide. This is an entirely plausible outcome of a complacent business-as-usual approach to 2015.
“Which world do you want to live in by 2030? Which world it will be depends upon the decision you make in 2015, and the preparations we make for it now.”
The letter also calls for a global movement to unite development, climate and human rights campaigns around this agenda to force the ambition that is needed.
A campaign called Action/2015 – backed by hundreds of organisations from around the world, from Amnesty International to the All Africa Conference of Churches, Save the Children to the ONE Campaign – will be launched in January 2015.
The letter says: “The good news is a global movement is coming together for 2015 and the future, inspired by the words of Nelson Mandela: ‘Like slavery, like apartheid, poverty is not natural. It is manmade and it can be overcome by the actions of human beings.’ Climate change too can and must be remedied by the actions of human beings.”
The campaigners say they fear that the summit on climate change called by the UN secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, this September is already in the balance, with states unwilling to make the early commitments they have been asked to for fear of weakening their negotiating hand.

Cameron is under pressure to confirm he will go to the summit on 23 September, and make a substantial pledge, but has so far made no commitment, citing the Scottish referendum and his own party conference. Efforts are also being made to galvanise the Labour leader, Ed Miliband, who has so far said little on the subject.