Vietnam calls for stronger NAM cooperation in COVID-19 combat hinh anh 1

PM Nguyen Xuan Phuc speaks at the online summit (Photo: VNA)

 

He made the suggestions at an online Summit of the NAM on May 4 that saw the attendance of heads of states/governments of 40 member countries.

The present context requires the NAM to strengthen and affirm the spirit of solidarity in order to overcome challenges and stamp out the epidemic, he stressed.

Member countries should map out strategies to complete the twin target of containing the disease and developing the economy, ensuring social welfare, the PM proposed.

He also called for support for enhancing multilateralism and international solidarity, and persistently pursuing major multilateralism commitments.

The NAM should continue to play the leading role in promoting respect for the law, democratising international relations, opposing power-based political behaviour, promoting the lift of sanctions and unilateral embargoes, and responding to the UN Secretary General’s appeal for a global ceasefire to maintain an international environment of peace and stability.

Phuc attributed Vietnam’s active achievements in the COVID-19 fight to the involvement of the entire political system and society with the spirit of “fighting the pandemic as if fighting an enemy”.

The Vietnamese Government has made all-out efforts to fight the disease while ensuring social welfare so that nobody is left behind, he emphasised.

The leader also spoke of Vietnam’s efforts in its capacity as ASEAN Chair 2020 and a non-permanent member of the United Nations Security Council in forging regional and international cooperation in order to effectively contain the epidemic.

He highlighted Vietnam’s financial and material contributions to some countries affected by the illness.

The UN General Assembly President, the UN Secretary General and the WHO Director General also attended the event.

At the end of the summit, member countries issued a joint statement supporting multilateralism as well as the role of international organisations in general, and the UN and the WHO in particular, while calling for enhanced international cooperation.

NAM member countries also condemned and called for the lifting of unilateral embargoes that violate the UN Charter and international law, and target some of its member states.

They agreed to establish the Non-Aligned Movement Task Force to work on a database that will include the basic humanitarian and medical needs and requirements of NAM member states.

Established in 1961, NAM is dedicated to representing the interests and aspirations of developing countries, and now has 120 members from Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean, accounting for 60 percent of UN members. Vietnam joined the organisation in 1976./.VNA