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Poet Amanda Gorman, K-pop’s Blackpink push global goals at U.N.

By:
Reuters
Updated: Sep 19, 2022, 16:51 UTC

By Michelle Nichols UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - South Korean pop band Blackpink and American poet Amanda Gorman took to the United Nations stage on Monday to urge action on climate change and other global goals that include achieving gender equality and ending hunger and poverty.

Inauguration of Joe Biden as the 46th President of the United States

By Michelle Nichols

UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) – South Korean pop band Blackpink and American poet Amanda Gorman took to the United Nations stage on Monday to urge action on climate change and other global goals that include achieving gender equality and ending hunger and poverty.

Gorman read a new poem in the U.N. General Assembly chamber in New York, a day before world leaders start making annual speeches to the 193-member body.

“I only ask that you care before it’s too late, that you live aware and awake, that you lead with love in hours of hate. I challenge you to heed this call, I dare you to shape our fate. Above all, I dare you to do good, so that the world might great,” said Gorman to a round of applause.

Gorman and Blackpink were taking part in an event to promote the 17 sustainable development goals created by the United Nations in 2015.

Speaking via video, the four members of Blackpink – U.N. advocates for the sustainable development goals – urged people to decrease energy consumption, choose local produce and cut food waste.

“We must seize this moment and take actions to create a world that is more sustainable and leave no one behind,” Blackpink member Jennie Kim.

A U.N. climate science panel has said governments and industries should drastically reduce fossil fuel emissions to contain global warming and limit its climate impacts.

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said various perils were pushing the sustainable development goals “further out of reach,” describing the challenge of rescuing them as “immense.”

“Young people are demanding action — not only for themselves, but for the generations of the future. The perils we face are no match for a world united,” Guterres said. “Let’s get to work. Let’s get our world back on track.”

(Reporting by Michelle Nichols; Editing by Aurora Ellis)

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