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Home » PM Davis addresses UN on Global Security and Climate Change, saying that the need for unity ‘has never been more pressing’
PM Davis addresses UN on Global Security and Climate Change, saying that the need for unity ‘has never been more pressing’
BAHAMAS September 29, 2025

PM Davis addresses UN on Global Security and Climate Change, saying that the need for unity ‘has never been more pressing’

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NEW YORK, New York – During his Official Address at the United Nations 80th Plenary Meeting General Debate, on September 27, 2025, Prime Minister and Minister of Finance the Hon. Philip Davis stated that the need for nations to unite in a single forum “has never been more pressing”.

“This multilateral effort is not a cure-all,” Prime Minister Davis said, at the United Nations Headquarters in New York, with his address titled “From the Ashes of History to the Challenges of Today: Why We Must Stand Together”.  “Wherever humans live, there will be conflict.  But today’s crises are far more complex, and seemingly more intractable and even more dangerous than 80 years ago.”

He added:  “The atomic weapons of the 1940s have proliferated into the nuclear weapons of today, able to wipe out all human life many times over.  Diseases now cross oceans in a day, potentially leading to pandemics that can last for years.  Cyberattacks can leap borders in a second.  Financial contagion can cripple economies in an instant.

“And climate change – yes, climate change – whose storms and rising seas and fires and floods make no distinction between rich or poor, strong or weak, can devastate us all.”

Prime Minister Davis noted that no single nation, acting on its own, can resolve those issues.  He added that multilateral approaches are not the problem.

“Multilateral approaches offer pathways to the solutions,” he said.  “The United Nations is not perfect, but it is the best tool for multilateral action that we have.”

“We workmen should not blame our tools,” Prime Minister Davis added.  “The flaw is not in the hammer, but in the hand that lets it fall.”

He noted that The Commonwealth of The Bahamas was committed to work with Members to find solutions.  That was why, he added, The Bahamas offered itself as a candidate for a non-permanent seat on the Security Council for the 2032-2033 term.

“This is not a candidacy just for ourselves,” Prime Minister Davis said.  “It is for every small state that not only insists that its voice must count, but also knows that we have much to contribute in matters of global peace.”

He added:  “For example, we cannot turn away from the agony of the Middle East. The aspirations of the Palestinian people for dignity and self-determination are real.  Along with the state of Israel, both peoples have a right to security, sovereignty, and peace.  For generations, this conflict has tested the conscience of the world.  But resignation is not an option.  The vision of two states, living side by side in peace and mutual recognition, remains the only pathway to justice, stability, and reconciliation.  We must not abandon dialogue for despair.

“The multilateral capabilities and capacity of the UN should be front and centre of this effort.”

Prime Minister Davis told his fellow country representatives that if they thought that the organisation had structural and institutional weaknesses, “then let’s fix them”. 

“If we think that standards are not evenly applied, that powerful states avoid consequences for aggression or human rights abuses, while weaker states are sanctioned more readily, then let’s step up and fix them,” he stated.

“The UN is only the sum of its parts,” Prime Minister Davis added.  “Any lack of effectiveness, any lack of practical impact, lies squarely at the feet of Member States.

“The solution is not to abandon it, but to fix it.”

For countries like The Bahamas, Prime Minister Davis said, the biggest challenges and crises they faced were not of their making. And yet, he added, they were the ones who felt the impacts the most.

“Our independent Bahamas has never fought a war: and yet conflicts in faraway places cause severe economic shocks, with Bahamians forced to pay higher prices and suffer from unreliable supply chains,” he said.

Prime Minister Davis stated that, above all, it was the physical changes relating to climate that were causing crises which were “critical, urgent and existential”.

“Over the past few years, many Bahamian voices have raised the alarm in many international forums about the risks we face from threats of climate change,” he said.  “We do not have the luxury of restarting an esoteric conversation about the causes of climate change.”

He added:  “Our living reality means that we simply do not have the time.  As I speak to you today, right now, a Tropical Storm is moving up our chain of islands.  We hope. We pray that we are lucky.  But can we remain lucky every season? Every single year?”

Prime Minister Davis pointed out that The Bahamas know what it needs to do: adapt and make itself more resilient.

“But even with the best intentions, a Small Island State like ours, with a population of around 400,000 people and an economy of approximately $12 billion, we do not have the resources,” he said.

“We have some of the cleanest air in the world, and emit far less than one percent of carbon generated by human activity, so we have to rely on others to also adapt,” he added.  “Is it really too much to ask of those most responsible to change their behaviour so that the rest of us might have a better chance at survival?”

Prime Minister Davis stated that, along with climate change, The Bahamas’ closest neighbours also suffered from a number of external threats.

“Our neighbours in Cuba have suffered for decades under an embargo which has caused suffering without delivering justice,” he pointed out.  “The embargo has punished ordinary people without changing policy.  Friends: Engagement, not isolation, is the only path forward.   And so, The Bahamas will continue to add its voice to the many who say: ‘The time for the embargo to be lifted is now’.”

Prime Minister Davis continued:  “And what of Haiti? Too often the suffering of its people has been met with indifference.  The Multinational Security Support Mission, under Kenyan leadership, has been an important bridge.   But bridges must be a pathway to the solution.

“That mission must evolve into a force strong enough to meet the still-present threat of violence and lawlessness.  But Haiti needs more than security. It needs investment, partnership, and hope.”

Prime Minister said that the lack of security in Haiti disproportionately, adversely impacted the security of The Bahamas.

“And we can no longer continue to carry so much of the burden and plight of the Haitian people,” he stated.  “The world must act.”

“We say this not out of fatigue, but out of the conscious realization that a crisis of this magnitude cannot be left to neighbours alone,” Prime Minister Davis said.  “It requires a global response.

The Bahamas therefore calls for a dedicated United Nations Support Office for Haiti: an institution to coordinate aid, sustain international attention, strengthen institutions, and nurture democracy.

“We cannot claim fidelity to peace, and at the same time, ignore Haiti.”

Prime Minister Davis pointed out that “the lessons of history are clear”.

He said:  “To retreat into a world of isolationist protectionism, where might is right, and the resources of the planet are plundered for the few, is to return to a time when life was famously described as ‘nasty, brutish and short’.”

Prime Minister Davis noted that there would be a fairly swift breakdown in international peace and security.

“With no global forum for conflict mediation, there is a strong likelihood that disputes would more often escalate into wars, border clashes and proxy conflicts,” he said.  “With every country facing increasingly dangerous and rapid climate change, the collective action needed to address it, would likely hasten climate breakdown.”

Prime Minister Davis added:  “The kind of economic fragmentation that heralded the Great Depression in America in the 1930s would re-emerge.  Protectionist sanctions and trade barriers, the collapse of supply chains and the resulting higher costs of living around the world, would recreate the same conditions that fueled the rise of fascism, and the explosion of the Second World War.  Is this what we really want?

“No matter how imperfect, are we really prepared to throw away what we have?”

Prime Minister Davis pointed out that they all recognised that they seem to live in a time when the global community appeared “indifferent to the suffering and deaths of millions of our fellow human beings”.

“And yet, even in the face of potential climate disaster, today we ask not for your pity,” he stated.  “We do not ask for charity.  We ask simply that you act in your own, enlightened self-interest.”

The security and prosperity of all in the region, the hemisphere, and the world are interconnected, Prime Minister Davis said.

“Even if we do not agree on the causes, as I have previously said to this Assembly, our lived reality is that our storms and hurricanes are your fires and floods,” he noted.

Prime Minister Davis added:  “If The Bahamas were to collapse because of the disproportionate risks we face from climate change, economic vulnerabilities and external geopolitical pressures, the world would lose more than one of the best tourist destinations on the planet.  We ask for nothing more than what we all want: the right to live in peace and security and in the pursuit of happiness – but most of all, just the right to live.

“Just give us the right to live.”

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