PANDEMIC PREPAREDNESS
Dr Balakrishnan also said it was essential to build a more robust global health architecture to protect future generations.
“After COVID-19, there will be other pandemics and other major health emergencies. In my view, actually COVID-19 was perhaps a full dress rehearsal for a worse pandemic to come,” he said.
“We must be better prepared to predict, prevent, detect, assess and respond to pandemics in a coordinated and effective fashion.
“We have a collective responsibility to rectify the longstanding under-investment in pandemic preparedness, amongst other global public goods.”
DIGITAL TRANSFORMATION
The minister also stressed the need for an open and inclusive global framework to harness the opportunities of the digital revolution while addressing its challenges.
“The digital transformation does not take place in a vacuum. It must be navigated in the context of intersecting issues – the geopolitical tensions, technological bifurcation, cybersecurity threats and the digital divide,” he said.
“The world has made significant progress by developing based on a single, shared technology stack. Interconnectedness, interoperability has brought us together, lowered costs, spurred innovation and competition and the cross-fertilisation of ideas.
“But if we fracture our world and our technology stack, all that good work and that speed of progress and innovation will be slowed down significantly.
“A zero-sum, exclusionary, bifurcated approach benefits no one. An erosion of trust and an atmosphere of confrontation will only breed more cyber threats and malicious cyber activities,” he added.
Dr Balakrishnan reiterated Singapore’s full support for the UN Secretary-General’s proposal for a global digital compact, adding that all states should benefit from the digital revolution and not be left behind.
US-CHINA RELATIONS, MYANMAR
Speaking to reporters after his address, Dr Balakrishnan said that the mood at this year’s UNGA was “somewhat sombre” as it was taking place during a time of anxiety, including over the relationship between the US and China.
He said the recent rhetoric and actions occurring across the Taiwan Strait were of “grave concern”, but that he was hopeful given the meeting between US Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi in New York.
“I think both sides understand the gravity of the situation. We can only hope that cool heads and good sense will prevail, and they will avoid the possibility of mishaps, miscalculations, accidents or worse, getting into an escalatory spiral.”
Dr Balakrishnan said the next two to three months would be “vital” in de-escalating the situation, and expressed hope that US President Joe Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping would be able to meet on the sidelines of upcoming summits and arrive at a modus vivendi.
A modus vivendi refers to an arrangement or agreement allowing conflicting parties to coexist peacefully, either indefinitely or until a final settlement is reached.
Turning to the situation in Myanmar, the minister said he was “pessimistic”, noting reports of continued violence and political detentions.
“Our view remains that the only way out of this quagmire is for political reconciliation, and for good faith discussions and negotiations between all the parties,” he said, adding that this must involve both Myanmar’s former leader Aung San Suu Kyi and military leader Min Aung Hlaing.
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