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May 7, 2024

2024 Stockholm Forum opens

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FA News Desk
SIPRI

Over the next three days, more than 400 participants from over 40 countries and 70 partner organizations will convene in person for the 11th annual Stockholm Forum on Peace and Development.

“We are here not only as witnesses but as active participants in a world on the edge of a global crisis,” Chair of the SIPRI Governing Board Stefan Löfven said in his opening remarks.

‘With these challenges as a backdrop, the idea of a universal right to peace and equality might seem like a distant goal. I do, however, encourage all of us to remain hopeful, because at the end of the day, we have the collective power to address these challenges if we do it right,’ said Löfven.

According to the SIPRI press release, Under the theme of ‘Building Trust in a Divided World’, the opening panel today agreed that it is crucial to address the structural drivers of conflict if we are to deliver the world we wish to see, in particular by addressing structural injustice. It is also vital to keep talking, and listening, and to look at the world from the perspective of the most marginalized.

Dag Juhlin Dannfelt, Director General and Head of Global Department, Swedish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, emphasized that today’s world is multipolar with competing spheres of interest and waning trust. The fragmented landscape can only be united if everyone is willing to talk and listen. ‘Talking is important. As diplomats, we talk too little . . . As diplomats it is good to understand how your opponent thinks.’

Betty Bigombe, Ambassador of Uganda to Malaysia, underlined this point, saying, ‘It is important that we can talk, but not amongst ourselves. Let’s reach out. It’s normal to disagree.’ She also urged the audience to consider how they can contribute to peace in the world and for peace processes to incorporate innovative methods to ensure that trust and recognizing trauma are central elements, the release added.

Highlighting climate action and the move to green technologies as a chance to start the process of rebuilding trust and addressing global inequality, Fonteh Akum, Executive Director of the Institute for Security Studies, said it is ‘an offer that addresses industrialization on the African continent, that drives up the production in value chains and creates a different value proposition. It is one then that also brings Africa out of marginalization in the global space.’

Calling also for the pyramid to be inverted, Amitabh Behar, Executive Director of Oxfam International, spoke about the current global crisis not as a polycrisis but as a crisis of the concentration of power and urged attendees to think about how to reconfigure the redistribution of power and wealth.

Katja Keul, Minister of State, Federal Foreign Office of Germany, stressed that the world needs to find its way back to common ground and find a way to talk from different perspectives. ‘We don’t have a choice. We all live in this one single world. We have a responsibility for each other, so let’s go step by step and do the work.’

Highlighting two themes from the discussion on climate diplomacy to rebuild trust and keeping the conversation going, SIPRI Director Dan Smith concluded by underscoring that a balance needs to be found between what we can do now and how the structural imbalances can be addressed later, said the release.