Alliance for Multilateralism: Our Commitment and Contribution to Building Back Better
Historical archive
Published under: Solberg's Government
Publisher: Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Speech/statement | Date: 25/09/2020
By Former Minister of Foreign Affairs Ine Eriksen Søreide (25 September)
Foreign Minister Ine Eriksen Søreide's statement at "Alliance for Multilateralism: Our Commitment and Contribution to Building Back Better”, 25 September.
Ladies and gentlemen, dear friends.
2020 will be remembered as the year when the world changed because of a virus.
It has changed everything from the way we greet each other to how meetings like this are conducted. 2020 was the year where we could not take part in the high point of international diplomacy in New York. And 2020 has also led us to a growing awareness of how extremely important the global health architecture is.
While I believe few in this meeting doubted the importance of international cooperation in the field of global health before, I think it is fair to say that the Covid-pandemic has made the entire world realize that some challenges can only be overcome if we work together.
And it is because of this simple reason that we have multilateralism: Some challenges know no borders, and some challenges are too big for any one country to solve alone.
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I would like to thank Germany and France for acknowledging this by bringing us together in this alliance for multilateralism.
A special thank you to you, Heiko and Jean-Yves, for taking the initiative and for bringing us together once more.
We need to use this moment to reflect on ways to improve the global health architecture.
Let me suggest a few points:
First, we need to strengthen the World Health Organisation as the leading and coordinating agency in global health, including in health preparedness and response.
Norway is prepared to find good and sustainable solutions together with other countries to achieve this.
Second: global, transparent collaboration on immunization is urgently needed to put an end to the Covid-19 pandemic.
Norway and South Africa are the co-chairs of the new global Access to Covid-19 Tools Accelerator Facilitation Council.
Its aim is to secure global access to vaccines, diagnostics and treatment, as well as strengthening health systems.
Norway will be participating fully in all stages of the vaccine pillar, the Covax facility, together with 156 countries and economies from all over the world.
We need governments to commit to this initiative with more than just words.
Global access to vaccines is what we need to work towards in order to end this pandemic.
As we have stated a number of times before: No one is safe until everyone is safe.
Third and finally, we have to be better prepared for the next pandemic.
We are looking forward to the independent evaluation of the world’s response to the Covid-19 pandemic.
We must use the ongoing crisis to rethink our positions and build back better for the future.