Putin responds to UN chief’s ‘one big family’ comparison

24 Oct, 2024 15:17 / Updated 54 minutes ago
Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has urged BRICS to help solve humanity’s problems

The global family of nations acts in the same way as regular families, meaning it sometimes has difficulties and disputes, Russian President Vladimir Putin has said, responding to a comparison made by UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres.

Putin and Guterres spoke on Thursday at the BRICS Summit in the Russian city of Kazan. They exchanged opinions on how the global community interacts, with the UN chief urging BRICS to function as a family that works together to achieve joint goals.

“You’ve mentioned we all should represent one big family,” the Russian president responded, “and that’s how we live. Families, unfortunately, have disagreements, scandals, division of property. They even fight at times.”

BRICS aims to lay the groundwork for cooperation and “create a good-spirited atmosphere in our common home,” Putin continued, vowing to continue engaging the UN to achieve that goal.

In his speech, Guterres remarked that BRICS carries significant weight in the modern world and can make great strides in tackling issues that face all of humanity.

“I salute your valuable commitment and support for multilateralism and international problem solving,” Guterres said. “No single group and no single country can act alone or in isolation. It takes a community of nations working as one global family to address global challenges.”

The UN chief identified four key areas that he believes need improvement. These comprise the international financial system, which he called “outdated, ineffective and unfair” to developing nations, fighting climate change, wider access of countries to advanced technologies, and “strengthening the machinery of peace,” which Guterres said requires a more robust UN Security Council and global reduction of armaments.

In his speech earlier in the day, Putin said the UN needs to reform to keep up with global changes and offer greater representation to developing nations. Guterres supported the idea.