UN General Assembly approves Pact for the Future

The UN General Assembly has approved a blueprint to bring the worldâs increasingly divided nations together to tackle 21st-century challenges from climate change and artificial intelligence to escalating conflicts and increasing inequality and poverty.
The 42-page Pact for the Future challenges leaders of the 193 UN member nations to turn promises into real actions that make a difference to the lives of the worldâs more than eight billion people.
The pact was adopted at the opening of the two-day Summit of the Future called by UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres, who thanked leaders and diplomats for taking the first steps and unlocking âthe doorâ to a better future.
âWe are here to bring multilateralism back from the brink,â he said.
âNow it is our common destiny to walk through it. That demands not just agreement, but action.â
The UN chief challenged the leaders: Implement the pact. Prioritise dialogue and negotiations. End âwars tearing our world apartâ from the Middle East to Ukraine and Sudan. Reform the powerful UN Security Council. Accelerate reforms of the international financial system. Ramp up a transition from fossil fuels. Listen to young people and include them in decision-making.
The pactâs fate was in question until the last moment.
There was so much suspense that Mr Guterres had three prepared speeches, one for approval, one for rejection, and one if things were not clear, UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric said.
âNo-one is happy with this pact,â said Russiaâs deputy foreign minister Sergey Vershinin.
The summit opened with him proposing amendments that would have significantly watered down the pact.
Speaking on behalf of Africaâs 54 nations â which opposed Russiaâs amendments â the Republic of Congo countered with a motion not to vote on the amendments.
I welcome the adoption of the Pact for the Future, the Global Digital Compact & the Declaration on Future Generations - a step-change towards more effective, inclusive, networked multilateralism.
— AntĂłnio Guterres (@antonioguterres) September 22, 2024
I've been fighting for the ideas in these documents since the first day of my⊠pic.twitter.com/zF1b29D5d1
That motion was approved to applause.
Russia only got support from Iran, Belarus, North Korea, Nicaragua, Sudan and Syria.
Assembly president Philemon Yang then put the pact to a vote and banged his gavel, signifying the consensus of all 193 UN member nations that was required for approval.
Russia has made significant inroads in Africa â in countries such as Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger and Central African Republic â and the continentâs rejection of its amendments along with Mexico, a major Latin American power, was seen as a blow to Moscow by some diplomats and observers.
Mr Yang announced ahead of speeches by world leaders that they would be muted after five minutes â a rare occurrence at the United Nations, where words are the backbone.
Among those who kept talking after their mics were silenced were Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, Kuwaitâs Crown Prince Sheikh Sabah Khalid Al Sabah and Irish President Michael Higgins.
The Pact for the Future says world leaders are gathering âat a time of profound global transformationâ, and it warns of ârising catastrophic and existential risksâ that could tip people everywhere âinto a future of persistent crisis and breakdownâ.
Yet, it says, leaders are coming to the UN at a time of hope and opportunity âto protect the needs and interests of present and future generations through actions in the Pact for the Futureâ.
NEWS: The Pact for the Future has been adopted by member countries by consensus at UN Headquarters in New York.
— United Nations (@UN) September 22, 2024
The adoption will help pave the way for greater international cooperation for #OurCommonFuture. pic.twitter.com/JnennVi2Jb
The pact includes 56 actions on issues including eradicating poverty, mitigating climate change, achieving gender equality, promoting peace and protecting civilians, and reinvigorating the multilateral system to âseize the opportunities of today and tomorrowâ.
Mr Guterres singled out a number of key provisions in the Pact for the Future and two accompanying annexes, a Global Digital Compact and Declaration on Future Generations.
The pact commits world leaders to reform the 15-member Security Council, to make it more reflective of todayâs world and âredress the historical injustice against Africaâ, which has no permanent seat, and to address the under-representation of the Asia-Pacific region and Latin America.
It also ârepresents the first agreed multilateral support for nuclear disarmament in more than a decadeâ, Mr Guterres said, and it commits âto steps to prevent an arms race in outer space and to govern the use of lethal autonomous weaponsâ.
The Global Digital Compact âincludes the first truly universal agreement on the international governance of artificial intelligenceâ, the UN chief said.
The compact commits leaders to establish an Independent International Scientific Panel in the United Nations to promote scientific understanding of AI, and its risks and opportunities.
It also commits the UN to initiate a global dialogue on AI governance with all key players.
The pactâs actions also include measures âto mount an immediate and co-ordinated response to complex shocksâ including pandemics, Mr Guterres said.
And it includes âa groundbreaking commitment by governments to listen to young people and include them in decision-makingâ.
As for human rights, Mr Guterres said: âIn the face of a surge in misogyny and a rollback of womenâs reproductive rights, governments have explicitly committed to removing the legal, social and economic barriers that prevent women and girls from fulfilling their potential in every sphere.â