Sat. Nov 23rd, 2024

Everyday inequality-related issue contributes to the death of 21,300 people. And this is a conservative estimate of the victims resulting from hunger, extreme weather events due to warming, lack of health care, and violence against women. Furthermore, the hypocrisy we witness every day: we see how European refugees fleeing war are treated with decency and humanity while others equally desperate from other parts of the world are faced with disdain in dehumanised camps. This imbalance is unacceptable. All human beings have the same value, no matter the geographical lottery of their place of birth.

These were reflections from GMT founder Graça Machel when she addressed hundreds of delegates during the 25th-anniversary celebrations of the International Cooperation program of the La Caixa Foundation in CosmoCaixa, Spain, on July 1st, 2022. She became the most applauded speaker in a discussion panel when addressing these issues, where leading names in international cooperation and development sectors were present. Other delegates included the president of Global Development of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Chris Elias; Pedro Alonso, an expert in Global Health; and Seth Berkley, director of the Gavi Alliance.

Mrs Machel at the 25th anniversary of the International Cooperation program of the La Caixa Foundation, held at CosmoCaixa, Spain

The day’s discussions focused on global health and development and the significant challenges and priorities for the coming years–with a common goal: to continue transforming lives. Mrs Machel further challenged achieving many of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by the 2030 threshold as possible. However, she predicted that little progress will be made without the radical transformation of health infrastructures. Seth Berkely added that to be prepared for future pandemics and to be able to assist all populations, it is imperative to have solvent leadership and strengthen health systems. On his part, Pedro Alonso shared that every year more than five million children under the age of five die from preventable causes, most of them from infectious diseases.