At no time since its founding has the United Nations faced a world so fractured and yet so desperately in need of collective action. This week, as leaders gather in New York for the UN General Assembly, the question is no longer whether speeches will inspire but whether the system itself can still deliver.
In 2015, when the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) were adopted, the mood was one of bold ambition. Ending poverty, eradicating hunger, expanding education, and containing climate change were not presented as dreams but as achievable targets. The SDGs were a blueprint for a fairer and more sustainable world. Today, with only five years left before 2030, that blueprint looks battered.
The pandemic was the first great rupture. It did not only claim lives. It dismantled progress. Schools closed in more than 190 countries, pushing millions of children out of learning. Vaccination campaigns were interrupted. Entire economies shrank, jobs vanished, and poverty rose for the first time in decades. Africa, which had been making steady gains in education and health, saw hard-won progress unravel. Yet it was also African scientists and institutions that showed resilience, from South Africa’s genomic sequencing that alerted the world to new COVID variants to Kenya’s rapid pivot in digital education. The lesson is clear: Africa is not simply a casualty of global shocks. It is a source of solutions.
Wars have compounded the damage. The invasion of Ukraine disrupted food and energy supplies worldwide, and nowhere felt it more acutely than Africa. From Cairo to Dakar, bread prices soared. Conflicts within Africa, from the Sahel to the Horn, displaced millions. Development cannot take root where insecurity reigns. Peace is not simply Goal 16 of the agenda. It is the precondition for all the others.
The war in Gaza has deepened the crisis of legitimacy. Images of devastation and civilian suffering dominate global screens, yet the UN system remains divided and often paralysed. For much of the Global South, Gaza is not only a humanitarian catastrophe. It is a test of whether international law applies equally or selectively. When rules appear inconsistent, authority is eroded everywhere. The very credibility needed to mobilise collective action on climate, security, or development is weakened.
African nations know this truth intimately. That is why they continue to push for regional mediation, continental security frameworks, and an end to the global arms flows that fuel local wars.
Above all hangs the climate crisis. The Horn of Africa has endured its worst drought in forty years. Cyclones have devastated Mozambique. Floods in West and Central Africa have swept away lives and livelihoods. Climate action was meant to be the heartbeat of the SDGs. Yet emissions continue to rise and climate finance remains unfulfilled. For Africa, which contributes less than four percent of global emissions but suffers the greatest consequences, the injustice is stark. Still, the continent is not waiting for rescue. From Kenya’s geothermal energy to Morocco’s solar fields, Africa is pioneering renewable solutions that the world should scale.
So can the SDGs be met? The honest answer is no, not in full. But that does not mean abandoning the project. The measure of leadership now is whether governments can salvage the spirit of ambition, act with urgency, and focus on what remains within reach. Universal education can still be delivered. Preventable child deaths can still be drastically reduced. Renewable energy can still expand. Even partial victories would transform millions of lives.
Doing so requires facing hard truths. Financing for development is broken. Many African countries spend more on debt repayments than on health and education combined. Climate finance is trapped in a cycle of pledges without delivery. The global financial system was built for another era. Today it multiplies inequality instead of correcting it. Reforming it is not an act of charity. It is an investment in global stability and shared prosperity.
It also requires new standards of leadership. The UN is only as strong as the political will of its members. Grand speeches mean nothing if they are not matched by action at home. Success should not be measured by applause in New York but by outcomes for citizens in Nairobi, Lagos, or Bogotá. Civil society, youth, and the private sector cannot remain spectators. They must be co-authors of the solutions.
Above all, there must be a renewal of faith in multilateralism. The crises of our time do not respect borders. No nation, however powerful, can face them alone. But multilateralism must evolve. A UN that does not reflect Africa, Asia, and Latin America is not a global institution. It is an old club. Reform is not optional. It is existential.
This week at UNGA is more than another round of speeches. It is a test of whether the world still believes in collective answers to collective problems. The SDGs were never only about numbers and targets. They were about dignity, justice, and the belief that every person matters.
The world has changed since 2015. The question is whether our leadership has changed enough to meet it. The verdict will not be written in New York. It will be written in the lives of people everywhere.