World

Guterres congratulates Biden and Harris, hails UN-US partnership as ‘essential pillar’

November 10, 2020
Senior UN officials have offered their congratulations to the president-elect of the United States Joe Biden, and vice president-elect Kamala Harris, on their election victory called on Saturday. — Courtesy photo
Senior UN officials have offered their congratulations to the president-elect of the United States Joe Biden, and vice president-elect Kamala Harris, on their election victory called on Saturday. — Courtesy photo

NEW YORK — Senior UN officials have offered their congratulations to the president-elect of the United States Joe Biden, and vice president-elect Kamala Harris, on their election victory called on Saturday.

“The Secretary-General congratulates the American people for a vibrant exercise of democracy in their country’s elections last week”, said a statement released on behalf of António Guterres, on Monday.

“He congratulates the president-elect and vice president-elect”, the statement continued, “and reaffirms that the partnership between the United States and the United Nations is an essential pillar of the international cooperation needed to address the dramatic challenges facing the world today.”

The president of the UN General Assembly, Volkan Bozkir, noted in a tweet that Mr. Biden had “a long history of supporting the UN”, and in Harris, her election was a “milestone for gender equality.”

“I look forward to deepening UN-US ties and working together towards a safer and more prosperous world.”

President Donald Trump has not accepted the result and is mounting legal challenges in court, with his campaign team filing lawsuits in several key states.

The head of UN Women, Phumzile Mlambo Ngcuka, described the prospect of having the first-ever woman as vice president, as “a hugely uplifting moment” for women and girls the world over, “especially for women of color”. Harris, who currently sits in the US Senate, representing California, is of Jamaican and Indian descent.

The Director-General of the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), Audrey Azoulay, said in a tweet that the “global challenges of today call for a renewed commitment from the United States” for the common good that the pillars of science, education, and culture represent.

She also noted that she was “very happy to see a teacher” moving into the top job at the White House, in the form of former vice president Biden’s wife, Jill, who has indicated that as First Lady, she will continue working fulltime.

“US leadership is more crucial than ever for the world’s most vulnerable”, said the head of the UN refugee agency UNHCR, Filippo Grandi, in a tweet. He warmly congratulated the pair and said the agency was looking forward to working with the new administration “on global and domestic refugee issues.”

That was a sentiment echoed by António Vitorino, the Director-General of the International Organization for Migration (IOM). He said on Twitter that the UN migration agency was looking forward to working with the new administration “on managing migration for the benefit of all.”

Earlier in the day, the head of UN health agency (WHO), Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, congratulated the declared winners of the US election, noting that the World Health Organization was looking forward to working with the administration “very closely”.

After President Trump made the decision to withdraw the US from WHO earlier this year in response to alleged missteps over the early course of the coronavirus pandemic, the president-elect has repeatedly vowed to rejoin the organization.

Biden over the weekend also tweeted out that his administration would be recommitting to the Paris Agreement on climate change, on day one of the new administration. — UN news


November 10, 2020
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