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Indonesia joins multilateral response to COVID-19

Indonesia has joined a group of like-minded countries to address certain challenges in the COVID-19 pandemic response, in hopes of setting an example that cooperation in producing “practical and implementable” norms and protocols is still possible amid the geopolitical jostling for solutions

Dian Septiari (The Jakarta Post)
Jakarta
Mon, April 13, 2020

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Indonesia joins multilateral response to COVID-19

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ndonesia has joined a group of like-minded countries to address certain challenges in the COVID-19 pandemic response, in hopes of setting an example that cooperation in producing “practical and implementable” norms and protocols is still possible amid the geopolitical jostling for solutions.

Canadian Foreign Minister François-Philippe Champagne initiated the International Coordination Group (ICG) on March 27 during a call he organized with the foreign ministers of several affected countries.

Indonesian Foreign Minister Retno LP Marsudi joined the ICG’s ranks during the group’s fifth teleconference on Tuesday.

The ICG is comprised primarily of Group of 20 countries including Argentina, China, India, Japan, Mexico, Russia, Saudi Arabia and the United States. The group has also invited non-G20 countries Morocco, Peru and Singapore into the fold.

According to the Canadian government’s website, the members of the new grouping have set out to discuss three main issues related to the global response to the pandemic: repatriation of citizens abroad; maintaining the global supply chain, especially for medical supplies and personal protective equipment (PPE); and support for vulnerable groups.

On the issue of repatriation, Retno underlined the need to agree on a procedure to manage the repatriation of citizens who complied with various health protocols. She also shared her notes on Indonesia’s efforts to resolve the shortage of medical supplies through coproduction with South Korea.

“We need to increase production cooperation between manufacturing countries and raw material supplier countries to ensure the continued availability of personal protective equipment,” Retno said in a statement The Jakarta Post received on Wednesday.

The Foreign Ministry’s director of international organizations for developing countries, Kamapradipta Isnomo, said that ICG founding country Canada had invited Indonesia to join.

“We decided to join because this initiative focuses on efforts at improving coordination [...] in the COVID-19 response. The issues are also very practical, so we like it,” Kama told the Post.

The grouping may prove useful, as its member states will all likely face the same challenges, from rising numbers of confirmed cases and deaths, to shortages of medical supplies and serving their large diasporas.

“If the [ICG] countries can achieve something or come up with common understanding, norms and principles governing these three issues, then we can take the lead in formulating international practices,” Kama said.

In a virtual briefing with reporters on Thursday, Retno said that the group’s 12 countries aimed to finalize two protocols – one on supply chains and another on an “air bridge” (agreed airlift routes) – both initiated by Canada.

In the coming weeks, senior officials from ICG member states will convene virtually to hammer out the details and finalize the suggested guidelines for adoption, said Kama.

Upon endorsement, the member states are expected to immediately implement the protocols and begin advocating them to other countries in the international community.

The COVID-19 pandemic has frustrated governments, overstretched the global health crisis response led by the World Health Organization and pushed countries to deal with the crisis on their own. According to the latest WHO figures, more than 1.3 million people in the world have contracted the virus that causes COVID-19, with almost 80,000 deaths.

“There is a lack of international coordination,” Kama said. “Nations are becoming more inward looking, and rightfully so because they have to take care of their own citizens, but let’s not forget the international cooperation aspect, which is what [the ICG] is trying to achieve.”

In particular, the G20 under current chair Saudi Arabia has been called out for its lumbering response to the pandemic. A slew of international figures have urged the international grouping to work faster to implement its members’ pledges, announced in a virtual summit on March 26, to address the deepening global health and economic crises brought on by COVID-19.

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