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UN lauds Bhutanโ€™s efforts, says His Majestyโ€™s leadership has inspired all Bhutanese to unite

By Chimi Wangmo

As the UN community in Bhutan observed the World Humanitarian Day this week amidst the double crisis of COVID-19 and the impact of climate change, UN said Bhutanโ€™s response to this double crisis, however, remains a beacon of hope for the world.

The UN said that Bhutanโ€™s response, which is guided by exceptional leadership and collective solidarity, has emerged itself amongst few countries in the world as one nation to successfully manage and maneuver both crises.

To support the countryโ€™s long-term recovery from the pandemic, the UN provided Nu 787.5 million (USD 10.5M) and additional funds from the Secretary Generalโ€™s UN COVID-19 Fund were also provided for education continuity and livelihoods in the tourism and agriculture sectors.

The UN believes the world can learn a lot from Bhutan, which remains resilient to the double burden of climate change and COVID-19.

UN Resident Coordinator, Gerald Daly, said His Majestyโ€™s leadership has inspired all Bhutanese to unite in combating this pandemic and as the UN looks forward to the next 50 years, the UN will continue to support the Royal Government in providing practical support to all sectors of Bhutanโ€™s society.

 โ€œDespite these challenges, we are focused on increasing our ambition for the country and people of Bhutan, because within every challenge lies an opportunity,โ€ Gerald Daly said.

UN Bhutan has partnered with the Royal Government to navigate these extraordinary challenges during the pandemic year, a time when the country also marks its 50th year as a member to the United Nations.

The UN community in Bhutan said UNICEF and WHO assisted the Royal Government to successfully inoculate 90 per cent of its eligible adult population within a week, an achievement hailed as the worldโ€™s fastest vaccine rollout. The UN also provided comprehensive emergency support and advocated public health messages.

Observing the occasion, WHO Country Representative Dr. Rui Paulo de Jesus said the UN and the Royal Government worked together to protect every Bhutanese from COVID-19 and to develop a stronger and a more resilient health system.

โ€œWe aim to protect the most vulnerable among us and ensure Bhutanโ€™s contribution towards the global effort to end the pandemic,โ€ he said.

While Bhutan has managed the pandemic well, the country faces serious shocks in key economic sectors such as tourism, which contributes more than 9 per cent to the GDP and is the biggest employer to the growing number of unemployed youth.

The UN is supporting the Royal Government with projects that consider opportunities for contributing to green recovery, boosting of domestic tourism, employment and increasing community resilience by mainstreaming biodiversity conservation into tourism development.

Meanwhile, the UNDP RR, Azusa Kubota, said that while global attention has been drawn to the pandemic crisis, the recent UNโ€™s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report confirms the gravity of, perhaps, a more pressing and long-lasting crisis, climate change.

โ€œBhutanโ€™s continued commitment to pursuing a greener and sustainable recovery from the crisis is inspiring and courageous, and exemplary in the global context. The most significant impact of climate change in Bhutan is the formation of supra-glacial lakes due to the accelerated retreat of glaciers, a result of increasing temperatures,โ€ she said.

With the countryโ€™s economic growth declining to 1.5 per cent in 2019-20 from 3.8 per cent the previous year, the Royal Government has detailed a comprehensive national response to COVID-19. 

In June, Bhutan raised its climate ambitions by committing to its second Nationally Determined Contribution ahead of the 2021 UN Climate Change Conference (COP 26). This commits Bhutan to remain carbon neutral and ensure that greenhouse gas emissions do not exceed carbon sequestration by its forests.

โ€˜A code red for humanityโ€™ is what Secretary General of the UN Antonio Guterres called last monthโ€™s report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

โ€œThe alarm bells are deafening, and the evidence is irrefutable:  greenhouse gas emissions from fossil fuel burning and deforestation are choking our planet and putting billions of people at immediate risk. Global heating is affecting every region on Earth, with many of the changes becoming irreversible,โ€ said the UN SG.

The UN is supporting these pursuits by assisting vulnerable communities to become more resilient to climate-induced disasters, through low emission development strategies focused on clean technology, renewable energy and green jobs creation and smart climate resilient agricultural practices.

Meanwhile, one of the immediate impacts of the pandemic were felt by the urban residents, who depend totally on imports from across the border and supplies from the rural farming community.

The UN supports the Royal Government in intensive technology-induced commercial scale vegetable production. Recognizing the immediate benefits in domestic vegetable production, substituting imports and employment generation, the urban vegetable programme was rolled out nationwide.

Meanwhile, to draw attention on what is being lost to climate change in the country, the UN will initiate a memorial for a glacier in Laya, Gasa in November this year.

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