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Unidentified speaker warns erosion of international law, urges ‘welcoming societies’
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Summary
An unidentified speaker said international law is failing in full view of the world and urged governments to invest in inclusion, education, jobs and social protection as part of a new social contract to prevent isolation and decline.
An unidentified speaker warned that the erosion of international law is happening openly and urged nations to build more welcoming societies rather than isolated citadels.
"The erosion of international law is not happening in the shadows," the speaker said. "It's unfolding before the eyes of the world on our screens live in 4k." They framed the immediate priority as investing in what they called "the software of social cohesion" — inclusion, education and skills, decent jobs and social protection — and described that effort as part of a "new social contract."
The speaker said communities should be built so "everyone's identity is respected and all feel they belong and are bound by shared civic values," adding that "harmony is never accidental. It requires deliberate policy, resources, and political courage." They warned that failing to prioritize common humanity risks "losing everything that makes us strong," and presented the choice as "inclusion or isolation, renewal or decline."
Invoking the United Nations as context for the appeal, the speaker said: "We must build united societies in a world of United Nations." Addressing those present as "Excellencies," the speaker closed by saying they had spoken plainly because the times demand urgent action and that "we cannot afford complacency, denial, or delay."
No formal motions or votes were recorded in the transcript; the remarks appear to be a policy appeal and not a legislative action.

