Refugees have the right to be protected | António Guterres

59,202 views ・ 2016-01-20

TED


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Bruno Giussani: Commissioner, thank you for coming to TED.
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António Guterres: Pleasure.
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BG: Let's start with a figure.
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During 2015, almost one million refugees and migrants arrived in Europe
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from many different countries,
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of course, from Syria and Iraq, but also from Afghanistan
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and Bangladesh and Eritrea and elsewhere.
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And there have been reactions of two different kinds:
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welcoming parties and border fences.
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But I want to look at it a little bit
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from the short-term and the long-term perspective.
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And the first question is very simple:
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Why has the movement of refugees spiked so fast in the last six months?
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AG: Well, I think, basically, what triggered this huge increase
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was the Syrian refugee group.
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There has been an increased movement into Europe from Africa, from Asia,
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but slowly growing, and all of a sudden we had this massive increase
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in the first months of this year.
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Why? I think there are three reasons,
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two long-term ones and the trigger.
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The long-term ones, in relation to Syrians,
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is that hope is less and less clear for people.
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I mean, they look at their own country
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and they don't see much hope to go back home,
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because there is no political solution,
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so there is no light at the end of the tunnel.
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Second, the living conditions
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of the Syrians in the neighboring countries have been deteriorating.
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We just had research with the World Bank,
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and 87 percent of the Syrians in Jordan
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and 93 percent of the Syrians in Lebanon
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live below the national poverty lines.
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Only half of the children go to school,
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which means that people are living very badly.
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Not only are they refugees, out of home,
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not only have they suffered what they have suffered,
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but they are living in very, very dramatic conditions.
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And then the trigger was when all of a sudden,
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international aid decreased.
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The World Food Programme was forced, for lack of resources,
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to cut by 30 percent food support to the Syrian refugees.
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They're not allowed to work,
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so they are totally dependent on international support,
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and they felt, "The world is abandoning us."
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And that, in my opinion, was the trigger.
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All of a sudden, there was a rush,
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and people started to move in large numbers
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and, to be absolutely honest,
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if I had been in the same situation
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and I would have been brave enough to do it,
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I think I would have done the same.
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BG: But I think what surprised many people is it's not only sudden,
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but it wasn't supposed to be sudden.
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The war in Syria has been happening for five years.
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Millions of refugees are in camps and villages and towns around Syria.
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You have yourself warned about the situation
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and about the consequences of a breakdown of Libya, for example,
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and yet Europe looked totally unprepared.
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AG: Well, unprepared because divided,
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and when you are divided, you don't want to recognize the reality.
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You prefer to postpone decisions,
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because you do not have the capacity to make them.
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And the proof is that even when the spike occurred,
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Europe remained divided
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and was unable to put in place a mechanism to manage the situation.
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You talk about one million people.
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It looks enormous,
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but the population of the European Union is 550 million people,
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which means we are talking about one per every [550] Europeans.
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Now, in Lebanon, we have one refugee per three Lebanese.
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And Lebanon? Struggling, of course, but it's managing.
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So, the question is: is this something that could have been managed
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if -- not mentioning the most important thing,
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which would have been addressing the root causes,
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but forgetting about root causes for now,
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looking at the phenomenon as it is --
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if Europe were able to come together in solidarity
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to create an adequate reception capacity of entry points?
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But for that, the countries at entry points need to be massively supported,
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and then screening the people with security checks
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and all the other mechanisms,
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distributing those that are coming into all European countries,
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according to the possibilities of each country.
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I mean, if you look at the relocation program
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that was approved by the Commission, always too little too late,
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or by the Council, too little too late --
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BG: It's already breaking down.
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AG: My country is supposed to receive four thousand.
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Four thousand in Portugal means nothing.
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So this is perfectly manageable if it is managed,
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but in the present circumstances, the pressure is at the point of entry,
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and then, as people move in this chaotic way through the Balkans,
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then they come to Germany, Sweden, basically, and Austria.
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They are the three countries that are, in the end, receiving the refugees.
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The rest of Europe is looking without doing much.
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BG: Let me try to bring up three questions,
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playing a bit devil's advocate.
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I'll try to ask them, make them blunt.
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But I think the questions are very present
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in the minds of many people in Europe right now,
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The first, of course, is about numbers.
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You say 550 million versus one million is not much, but realistically,
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how many people can Europe take?
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AG: Well, that is a question that has no answer,
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because refugees have the right to be protected.
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And there is such a thing as international law,
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so there is no way you can say, "I take 10,000 and that's finished."
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I remind you of one thing:
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in Turkey, at the beginning of the crisis, I remember one minister saying,
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"Turkey will be able to receive up to 100,000 people."
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Turkey has now two million three-hundred thousand
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or something of the sort, if you count all refugees.
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So I don't think it's fair to say how many we can take.
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What it is fair to say is: how we can we organize ourselves
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to assume our international responsibilities?
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And Europe has not been able to do so,
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because basically, Europe is divided because there is no solidarity
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in the European project.
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And it's not only about refugees; there are many other areas.
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And let's be honest, this is the moment in which we need more Europe
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instead of less Europe.
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But as the public less and less believes in European institutions,
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it is also each time more difficult to convince the public
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that we need more Europe to solve these problems.
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BG: We seem to be at the point
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where the numbers turn into political shifts, particularly domestically.
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We saw it again this weekend in France,
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but we have seen it over and over in many countries:
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in Poland and in Denmark and in Switzerland and elsewhere,
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where the mood changes radically because of the numbers,
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although they are not very significant in absolute numbers.
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The Prime Minister of --
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AG: But, if I may, on these:
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I mean, what does a European see at home
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in a village where there are no migrants?
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What a European sees is, on television,
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every single day, a few months ago, opening the news every single day,
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a crowd coming, uncontrolled,
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moving from border to border,
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and the images on television were of hundreds
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or thousands of people moving.
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And the idea is that nobody is taking care of it --
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this is happening without any kind of management.
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And so their idea was, "They are coming to my village."
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So there was this completely false idea that Europe was being invaded
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and our way of life is going to change, and everything will --
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And the problem is that if this had been properly managed,
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if people had been properly received,
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welcomed, sheltered at point of entry, screened at point of entry,
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and the moved by plane to different European countries,
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this would not have scared people.
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But, unfortunately, we have a lot of people scared,
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just because Europe was not able to do the job properly.
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BG: But there are villages in Germany
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with 300 inhabitants and 1,000 refugees.
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So, what's your position?
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How do you imagine these people reacting?
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AG: If there would be a proper management of the situation
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and the proper distribution of people all over Europe,
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you would always have the percentage that I mentioned:
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one per each 2,000.
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It is because things are not properly managed
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that in the end we have situations
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that are totally impossible to live with, and of course if you have a village --
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in Lebanon, there are many villages
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that have more Syrians than Lebanese; Lebanon has been living with that.
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I'm not asking for the same to happen in Europe,
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for all European villages to have more refugees than inhabitants.
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What I am asking is for Europe to do the job properly,
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and to be able to organize itself to receive people
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as other countries in the world were forced to do in the past.
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BG: So, if you look at the global situation not only at Europe --
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(Applause)
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BG: Yes!
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(Applause)
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BG: If you look at the global situation, so, not only at Europe,
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I know you can make a long list of countries
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that are not really stepping up,
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but I'm more interested in the other part --
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is there somebody who's doing the right thing?
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AG: Well, 86 percent of the refugees in the world
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are in the developing world.
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And if you look at countries like Ethiopia --
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Ethiopia has received more than 600,000 refugees.
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All the borders in Ethiopia are open.
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And they have, as a policy,
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they call the "people to people" policy that every refugee should be received.
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And they have South Sudanese,
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they have Sudanese, they have Somalis.
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They have all the neighbors.
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They have Eritreans.
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And, in general,
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African countries are extremely welcoming of refugees coming,
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and I would say that in the Middle East
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and in Asia, we have seen a tendency for borders to be open.
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Now we see some problems with the Syrian situation,
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as the Syrian situation evolved into also a major security crisis,
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but the truth is that for a large period,
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all borders in the Middle East were open.
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The truth is that for Afghans,
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the borders of Pakistan and Iran were open for, at the time,
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six million Afghans that came.
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So I would say that even today, the trend in the developing world
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has been for borders to be open.
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The trend in the developed world is for these questions to become
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more and more complex,
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especially when there is, in the public opinion,
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a mixture of discussions between refugee protections on one side
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and security questions -- in my opinion, misinterpreted -- on the other side.
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BG: We'll come back to that too,
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but you mentioned the cutting of funding and the vouchers
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from the World Food Programme.
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That reflects the general underfunding of the organizations
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working on these issues.
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Now that the world seems to have woken up,
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are you getting more funding and more support,
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or it's still the same?
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AG: We are getting more support.
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I would say that we are coming close to the levels of last year.
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We were much worse during the summer.
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But that is clearly insufficient to address the needs of the people
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and address the needs of the countries
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that are supporting the people.
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And here we have a basic review of the criteria, the objectives,
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the priorities of development cooperation that is required.
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For instance, Lebanon and Jordan are middle-income countries.
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Because they are middle-income countries,
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they cannot receive soft loans or grants from the World Bank.
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Now, today this doesn't make any sense,
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because they are providing a global public good.
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They have millions of refugees there,
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and to be honest, they are pillars of stability in the region,
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with all the difficulties they face,
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and the first line of defense of our collective security.
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So it doesn't make sense
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that these countries are not a first priority
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in development cooperation policies.
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And they are not.
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And not only do the refugees live in very dramatic circumstances
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inside those countries,
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but the local communities themselves are suffering,
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because salaries went down,
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because there are more unemployed,
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because prices and rents went up.
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And, of course, if you look at today's situation
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of the indicators in these countries,
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it is clear that, especially their poor groups of the population,
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are living worse and worse because of the crisis they are facing.
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BG: Who should be providing this support?
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Country by country, international organizations, the European Union?
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Who should be coming up with this support?
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AG: We need to join all efforts.
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It's clear that bilateral cooperation is essential.
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It's clear that multilateral cooperation is essential.
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It's clear that international financial institutions should have flexibility
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in order to be able to invest more massively
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in support to these countries.
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We need to combine all the instruments and to understand that today,
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in protracted situations, at a certain moment,
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that it doesn't make sense anymore to make a distinction
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between humanitarian aid and development aid
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or development processes.
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Because you are talking about children in school,
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you are talking about health,
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you are talking about infrastructure that is overcrowded.
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You are talking about things that require a long-term perspective,
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a development perspective
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and not only an emergency humanitarian aid perspective.
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BG: I would like your comment on something
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that was in newspapers this morning.
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It is a statement made by the current front-runner
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for the Republican nomination for US President, Donald Trump.
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Yesterday, he said this.
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(Laughter)
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No, listen to this. It's interesting.
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I quote: "I am calling for a total and complete shutdown
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of Muslims entering the US,
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until our country's representatives can figure out what's going on."
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How do you react to that?
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AG: Well, it's not only Donald Trump.
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We have seen several people around the world
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with political responsibility saying, for instance,
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that Muslims refugees should not be received.
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And the reason why they say this
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is because they think that by doing or saying this,
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they are protecting the security of their countries.
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Now, I've been in government.
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I am very keen on the need for governments
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to protect the security of their countries
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and their people.
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But if you say, like that,
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in the US or in any European country,
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"We are going to close our doors to Muslim refugees,"
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what you are saying is the best possible help
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for the propaganda of terrorist organizations.
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Because what you are saying --
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(Applause)
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What you are saying will be heard by all the Muslims in your own country,
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and it will pave the way for the recruitment
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and the mechanisms that, through technology,
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Daesh and al-Nusra, al-Qaeda, and all those other groups
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are today penetrating in our societies.
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And it's just telling them, "You are right, we are against you."
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So obviously, this is creating in societies that are all multiethnic,
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multi-religious, multicultural,
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this is creating a situation in which, really,
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it is much easier for the propaganda of these terrorist organizations
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to be effective in recruiting people for terror acts
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within the countries where these kinds of sentences are expressed.
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BG: Have the recent attacks in Paris and the reactions to them
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made your job more difficult?
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AG: Undoubtedly.
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BG: In what sense?
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AG: In the sense that, I mean, for many people the first reaction
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in relation to these kinds of terrorist attacks is: close all borders --
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not understanding that the terrorist problem in Europe is largely homegrown.
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We have thousands and thousands of European fighters in Syria and in Iraq,
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so this is not something that you solve by just not allowing Syrians to come in.
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And I must say, I am convinced
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that the passport that appeared,
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I believe, was put by the person who has blown --
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BG: -- himself up, yeah.
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AG: [I believe] it was on purpose,
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because part of the strategies of Daesh is against refugees,
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because they see refugees as people that should be with the caliphate
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and are fleeing to the crusaders.
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And I think that is part of Daesh's strategy to make Europe react,
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closing its doors to Muslim refugees
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and having an hostility towards Muslims inside Europe,
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exactly to facilitate Daesh's work.
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And my deep belief is that it was not the refugee movement
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that triggered terrorism.
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I think, as I said,
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essentially terrorism in Europe is today a homegrown movement
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in relation to the global situation that we are facing,
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and what we need is exactly to prove these groups wrong,
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by welcoming and integrating effectively
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those that are coming from that part of the world.
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And another thing that I believe is that to a large extent,
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what we are today paying for in Europe
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is the failures of integration models
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that didn't work in the '60s, in the '70s, in the '80s,
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in relation to big migration flows that took place at that time
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and generated what is today in many of the people, for instance,
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of the second generation of communities,
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a situation of feeling marginalized,
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having no jobs,
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having improper education,
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living in some of the neighborhoods that are not adequately provided
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by public infrastructure.
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And this kind of uneasiness, sometimes even anger,
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that exists in this second generation
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is largely due to the failure of integration policies,
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to the failure of what should have been a much stronger investment
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17:13
in creating the conditions for people to live together and respect each other.
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For me it is clear.
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(Applause)
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For me it is clear that all societies will be multiethnic, multicultural,
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17:26
multi-religious in the future.
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To try to avoid it is, in my opinion, impossible.
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And for me it's a good thing that they will be like that,
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but I also recognize that, for that to work properly,
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you need a huge investment
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in the social cohesion of your own societies.
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And Europe, to a large extent, failed in that investment
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in the past few decades.
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17:50
BG: Question: You are stepping down from your job at the end of the year,
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after 10 years.
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If you look back at 2005,
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when you entered that office for the first time, what do you see?
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AG: Well, look:
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In 2005, we were helping one million people go back home
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in safety and dignity, because conflicts had ended.
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Last year, we helped 124,000.
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In 2005, we had about 38 million people displaced by conflict in the world.
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Today, we have more than 60 million.
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At that time, we had had, recently,
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some conflicts that were solved.
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Now, we see a multiplication of new conflicts
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and the old conflicts never died:
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Afghanistan, Somalia, Democratic Republic of Congo.
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It is clear that the world today is much more dangerous than it was.
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It is clear that the capacity of the international community
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to prevent conflicts and to timely solve them,
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is, unfortunately, much worse than what it was 10 years ago.
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There are no clear power relations in the world,
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no global governance mechanisms that work,
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which means that we live in a situation
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where impunity and unpredictability tend to prevail, and that means
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that more and more people suffer,
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namely those that are displaced by conflicts.
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BG: It's a tradition in American politics
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19:13
that when a President leaves the Oval Office for the last time,
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he leaves a handwritten note on the desk for his successor
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that walks in a couple of hours later.
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If you had to write such a note to your successor, Filippo Grandi,
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what would you write?
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AG: Well, I don't think I would write any message.
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You know, one of the terrible things when one leaves an office
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19:32
is to try to become the backseat driver,
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19:35
always telling the new one what to do.
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So that, I will not do.
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If I had to say something to him,
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19:42
it would be, "Be yourself, and do your best."
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BG: Commissioner, thank you for the job you do.
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Thank you for coming to TED.
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(Applause)
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