GA / BRAZIL DA SILVA
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STORY: GA / BRAZIL DA SILVA
TRT: 03:19
SOURCE: UNIFEED
RESTRICTIONS: NONE
LANGUAGES: PORTUGUESE / NATS
DATELINE: 19 SEPTEMBER 2023, NEW YORK CITY / FILE
SHOTLIST:
1. Wide shot, exterior UN Headquarters
2. Wide shot, da Silva walking to podium, General Assembly Hall
3. SOUNBITE (Portuguese) Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, President, Federative Republic of Brazil:
“The UN's broadest and most ambitious collective action aimed at development – the 2030 Agenda – could become its biggest failure. We are halfway through the implementation period and still far from the defined goals.”
4. Wide shot, delegates, General Assembly Hall
5. SOUNBITE (Portuguese) Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, President, Federative Republic of Brazil:
“Reducing inequalities within countries requires including the poor in government budget and making the rich pay taxes proportionate to their wealth. In Brazil, we are committed to implementing all 17 Sustainable Development Goals in an integrated and indivisible manner.”
6. Wide shot, delegates, General Assembly Hall
7. SOUNBITE (Portuguese) Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, President, Federative Republic of Brazil:
“Acting against climate change involves thinking about tomorrow and facing historical inequalities. Rich countries grew based on a model with high rates of climate-damaging gas emissions. The climate emergency makes it urgent to correct course and implement what has already been agreed upon. We speak of common but differentiated responsibilities for no other reason.”
8. Wide shot, delegates, General Assembly Hall
9. SOUNBITE (Portuguese) Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, President, Federative Republic of Brazil:
“We want to arrive at COP 28 in Dubai with a joint vision that reflects, without any coaching, the priorities for preserving the Amazon, Congo, and Borneo-Mekong basins based on our needs. Without mobilizing financial and technological resources, we cannot implement what we decided in the Paris Agreement and the Global Biodiversity Framework. The promise to allocate 100 billion dollars – annually – to developing countries remains just that, a long promise.”
10. Wide shot, delegates, General Assembly Hall
11. SOUNBITE (Portuguese) Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, President, Federative Republic of Brazil:
“The unequal and distorted representation in the management of the IMF and the World Bank is unacceptable. We have not corrected the excesses of market deregulation and the ideology of the minimum state. The foundations of new economic governance have not been laid.”
12. Wide shot, delegates, General Assembly Hall
13. SOUNBITE (Portuguese) Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, President, Federative Republic of Brazil:
“We shall continue to criticize any attempt to divide the world into zones of influence and to revive the Cold War. The UN Security Council has been progressively losing its credibility. This fragility is the specific results of actions from its permanent members that wage unauthorized wars aimed at territorial expansion or regime change.”
14. Wide shot, da Silva leaving podium, General Assembly Hall
STORYLINE:
Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva said, “The UN's broadest and most ambitious collective action aimed at development – the 2030 Agenda – could become its biggest failure.”
He added, “We are halfway through the implementation period and still far from the defined goals.”
Addressing the General Assembly’s General Debate today (19 Sep), da Silva stressed that reducing inequalities within countries requires including the poor in government budget and making the rich pay taxes proportionate to their wealth.
He added, “In Brazil, we are committed to implementing all 17 Sustainable Development Goals in an integrated and indivisible manner.”
He also said, “Acting against climate change involves thinking about tomorrow and facing historical inequalities. Rich countries grew based on a model with high rates of climate-damaging gas emissions. The climate emergency makes it urgent to correct course and implement what has already been agreed upon. We speak of common but differentiated responsibilities for no other reason.”
He continued, “We want to arrive at COP 28 in Dubai with a joint vision that reflects, without any coaching, the priorities for preserving the Amazon, Congo, and Borneo-Mekong basins based on our needs. Without mobilizing financial and technological resources, we cannot implement what we decided in the Paris Agreement and the Global Biodiversity Framework. The promise to allocate 100 billion dollars – annually – to developing countries remains just that, a long promise.”
He stated, “The unequal and distorted representation in the management of the IMF and the World Bank is unacceptable. We have not corrected the excesses of market deregulation and the ideology of the minimum state. The foundations of new economic governance have not been laid.”
He concluded, “We shall continue to criticize any attempt to divide the world into zones of influence and to revive the Cold War. The UN Security Council has been progressively losing its credibility. This fragility is the specific results of actions from its permanent members that wage unauthorized wars aimed at territorial expansion or regime change.”
TRT: 03:19
SOURCE: UNIFEED
RESTRICTIONS: NONE
LANGUAGES: PORTUGUESE / NATS
DATELINE: 19 SEPTEMBER 2023, NEW YORK CITY / FILE
SHOTLIST:
1. Wide shot, exterior UN Headquarters
2. Wide shot, da Silva walking to podium, General Assembly Hall
3. SOUNBITE (Portuguese) Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, President, Federative Republic of Brazil:
“The UN's broadest and most ambitious collective action aimed at development – the 2030 Agenda – could become its biggest failure. We are halfway through the implementation period and still far from the defined goals.”
4. Wide shot, delegates, General Assembly Hall
5. SOUNBITE (Portuguese) Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, President, Federative Republic of Brazil:
“Reducing inequalities within countries requires including the poor in government budget and making the rich pay taxes proportionate to their wealth. In Brazil, we are committed to implementing all 17 Sustainable Development Goals in an integrated and indivisible manner.”
6. Wide shot, delegates, General Assembly Hall
7. SOUNBITE (Portuguese) Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, President, Federative Republic of Brazil:
“Acting against climate change involves thinking about tomorrow and facing historical inequalities. Rich countries grew based on a model with high rates of climate-damaging gas emissions. The climate emergency makes it urgent to correct course and implement what has already been agreed upon. We speak of common but differentiated responsibilities for no other reason.”
8. Wide shot, delegates, General Assembly Hall
9. SOUNBITE (Portuguese) Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, President, Federative Republic of Brazil:
“We want to arrive at COP 28 in Dubai with a joint vision that reflects, without any coaching, the priorities for preserving the Amazon, Congo, and Borneo-Mekong basins based on our needs. Without mobilizing financial and technological resources, we cannot implement what we decided in the Paris Agreement and the Global Biodiversity Framework. The promise to allocate 100 billion dollars – annually – to developing countries remains just that, a long promise.”
10. Wide shot, delegates, General Assembly Hall
11. SOUNBITE (Portuguese) Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, President, Federative Republic of Brazil:
“The unequal and distorted representation in the management of the IMF and the World Bank is unacceptable. We have not corrected the excesses of market deregulation and the ideology of the minimum state. The foundations of new economic governance have not been laid.”
12. Wide shot, delegates, General Assembly Hall
13. SOUNBITE (Portuguese) Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, President, Federative Republic of Brazil:
“We shall continue to criticize any attempt to divide the world into zones of influence and to revive the Cold War. The UN Security Council has been progressively losing its credibility. This fragility is the specific results of actions from its permanent members that wage unauthorized wars aimed at territorial expansion or regime change.”
14. Wide shot, da Silva leaving podium, General Assembly Hall
STORYLINE:
Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva said, “The UN's broadest and most ambitious collective action aimed at development – the 2030 Agenda – could become its biggest failure.”
He added, “We are halfway through the implementation period and still far from the defined goals.”
Addressing the General Assembly’s General Debate today (19 Sep), da Silva stressed that reducing inequalities within countries requires including the poor in government budget and making the rich pay taxes proportionate to their wealth.
He added, “In Brazil, we are committed to implementing all 17 Sustainable Development Goals in an integrated and indivisible manner.”
He also said, “Acting against climate change involves thinking about tomorrow and facing historical inequalities. Rich countries grew based on a model with high rates of climate-damaging gas emissions. The climate emergency makes it urgent to correct course and implement what has already been agreed upon. We speak of common but differentiated responsibilities for no other reason.”
He continued, “We want to arrive at COP 28 in Dubai with a joint vision that reflects, without any coaching, the priorities for preserving the Amazon, Congo, and Borneo-Mekong basins based on our needs. Without mobilizing financial and technological resources, we cannot implement what we decided in the Paris Agreement and the Global Biodiversity Framework. The promise to allocate 100 billion dollars – annually – to developing countries remains just that, a long promise.”
He stated, “The unequal and distorted representation in the management of the IMF and the World Bank is unacceptable. We have not corrected the excesses of market deregulation and the ideology of the minimum state. The foundations of new economic governance have not been laid.”
He concluded, “We shall continue to criticize any attempt to divide the world into zones of influence and to revive the Cold War. The UN Security Council has been progressively losing its credibility. This fragility is the specific results of actions from its permanent members that wage unauthorized wars aimed at territorial expansion or regime change.”
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3090498