The Intersection of War and Climate Change | Victor Ochen | TED

18,661 views ・ 2024-08-30

TED


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The world today,
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it's no longer news that we are grappling
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with the devastating effects of climate change.
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Communities are searching for solutions,
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trying to turn the tide onto the future that at times really looks so depressing.
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And there is no place this is more real than in the continent of Africa.
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But of course,
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conversations about climate change
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often miss out on accounting for the most critical barrier
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to climate solution,
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which is conflict.
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I got to know about this through my personal experience
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as a survivor of war,
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but also working with a population
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that has been living through conflicts for years.
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If you may, I would love to share with you a story
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based on my personal encounter with the communities that I work with
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and who are going through the difficult times of climate change.
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I'm from Uganda.
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Recently, in my home district of Lira,
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a woman was arrested
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because she had cut the shea trees
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and burned the charcoal into fuel.
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And it's a crime in Uganda.
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I saw her being walked to the police station,
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and I decided to ask her,
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said, “My sister, I see you are being taken,
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and you'll be charged for this crime.
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But I have a question for you.
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If you were forgiven for this crime today,
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do you promise that you will never do it again?"
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The frustrated woman looked at me
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and told me and said, "You know what?
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Even if they release me right now, I would do it again.
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I would do it again, because only through burning charcoal
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that I can raise money to pay for my children's education.
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And it's only through burning charcoal that I can raise money
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to meet the medical bills for my children, who are always falling sick of malaria.
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So the truth is, I would do it again."
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This is the story for many in Uganda.
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Beautiful country with so much potential,
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but always undermined
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by a near constant state of violent conflict.
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And you know,
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in a community where poverty and unemployment is so high,
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fighting against climate change is almost a losing battle.
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But when you look through across Africa,
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you find that most of the countries most vulnerable to climate crisis
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are going through some sort of conflict.
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When you look through the Sahel region,
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you find there's always constant attack,
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clashes between the herding,
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the farming and the fishing communities
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over diminishing land and water resources.
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Of course, with not so much option,
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humanity will always do anything possible for survival.
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I remember this firsthand when I was growing up as a child
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in war zone in northern Uganda.
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I myself had to cut the trees, to burn charcoal,
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to raise money to meet the basic needs,
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but most importantly, to pay for my education.
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An education that has enabled me
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to be able to stand before you to give this speech today.
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Now the big question is:
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How can we make it,
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what can we do to create an alternative to environmental destruction
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and provide economic means
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that will support conditions necessary for peace?
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That's the biggest question we should be asking ourselves today.
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I remember, I think about this a lot
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through my work at African Youth Initiative Network, AYINET,
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where for decades we have been supporting war survivors from Uganda,
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from Congo, from Sudan and South Sudan,
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and we've been able to mobilize young people
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to make them game changers for peace and development.
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We mediate in community conflicts
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and support agricultural activities
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as a mechanism to provide youth economic alternatives to violence.
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And we have been successful.
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So the success of this work we have done is a clear manifestation
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of how a local initiative
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can greatly impact on economic empowerment,
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on conflict resolution and on climate change.
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And every time I think about this,
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I do believe this is an opportunity for Africa
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to also impact on world peace.
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And I sincerely know for sure that for us to achieve this goal,
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the following three points have always come very strongly in my heart.
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And the first is we need to change the way
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we're talking about climate change.
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It is time that we take the climate dialogue
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beyond just mere weather patterns
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and help people understand what they are fighting for,
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who they are protecting,
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what will they win or lose based on their action or inactions.
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This has always helped us.
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I remember early last year
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I went to my village with my twin brother, Jack.
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We were welcomed by one of the community elders, Charles.
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He was so happy to see us, to welcome us home,
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and he was sad that he couldn't give us some sugar cane,
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which used to be his traditional gift to us,
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simply because the wetland that used to grow sugar cane had dried up,
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and he was really sad about it.
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My twin brother comforted him and told him,
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“Weather is changing, weather would encourage us,
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let community do our part by planting trees
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so that we can attract more rain."
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When he heard this, he asked my brother, said, “Mr. Opio,
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are you saying, as you are saying, trees is good to bring rain?
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Now that you have planted so many trees in your community,
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is it raining in your garden?"
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To me, this was sincerely the most basic,
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important organic question that could come from this community.
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But also it made me reflect if, if at all,
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our global discussions about climate change
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is actually responding to the needs at the grassroots.
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So, today,
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in northern Uganda,
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shea trees are no longer producing enough fruits
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because there's local knowledge
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that shea trees do need bush burning
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in order to stimulate flowering.
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But also, we know bush burning is bad for environment,
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creating a lot of confusion.
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And this brings in the issue that contradictory accounts from experts,
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from activists, from the government,
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which leaves the local communities
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as collateral victims of global disagreement.
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And this has kept every one of us
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in the merry-go-round of climate confusion.
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Secondly ...
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We need to engage the population that is most affected,
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in this case, the young people, the youth.
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With 70 percent of Africa below the age of 30,
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youth represent the largest demographic opportunity for the continent.
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We have to engage, including youth,
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to be an opportunity to uplift the continent
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from the devastating poverty.
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And excluding young people in all the climate activities
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will benefit conflict.
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So we must engage young people.
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This is because we do know youth are the legitimate owners of the future,
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so their inclusion is mandatory.
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And finally,
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as we seek to mitigate the effects of climate change and conflict,
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it is time to hold corporations,
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government and individuals accountable
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for committing climate crimes at home and abroad.
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This should be done by establishing International Climate Court.
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Today, the world is celebrating the transition to clean energy.
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We are celebrating the progress.
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But we cannot celebrate the transition to clean energy
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while being silent about the death and suffering of millions of people.
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In Democratic Republic of Congo, for instance,
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populations have been displaced,
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millions have been killed,
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lost properties,
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just because companies or corporations
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are exploiting their natural resources.
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And we have seen also rebel groups fighting to take on the fertile lands,
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lands rich with minerals in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
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The truth is, the suffering, the death,
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the inhumanity we are seeing in Congo
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is a proof that the road to clean energy
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is so far the dirtiest road on the planet.
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Of course, I'm also worried.
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I'm worried that the climate crisis will leave the world more divided,
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especially between the global North and the global South.
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I'm also worried that the rich and the poor will be divided.
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The rural and urban.
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Why?
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Because 10 percent of the world's wealthiest
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are discussing a reduction of global emissions by flying less.
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And yet, greater, poorer majority
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are dreaming for only the one-time opportunity to fly.
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And to them,
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all these climate regulations being proposed
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appear as an effort to reinforce the pre-existing inequality,
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which has always been meant to keep them poor.
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This is going to create the division.
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Lastly,
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there is an African proverb
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by legendary South African musician, Lucky Dube,
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who sang the song that says:
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"The night is long for a hungry child."
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"The night is long for a hungry child."
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What an image.
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That child could have been your child.
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Think about that mom,
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that dad, who are powerlessly waiting for the morning,
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to try to get something for the child who can't sleep
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because he went to bed with empty stomach.
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If we have opportunity, we should have leadership
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that are willing to create conditions
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that will help build the community of tomorrow
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that our children can count on.
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And lastly, may we realize that the birth of a new era
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would mean we must all understand that climate change and war
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are intertwined global long-term challenges.
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It will require all of us to work together and, most importantly,
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mobilize a generation that is so willing to defy violence
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and work for the good of all of us.
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Apwoyo matek. Thank you very much.
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(Applause)
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