In his first major Commonwealth event since becoming Foreign
Secretary, hosted a reception for the 52
Foreign Ministers of the Commonwealth in the margins of the UN
General Assembly in New York on 25 September 2018.
Mr Hunt welcomed progress by Commonwealth countries on the
commitments they made at the Commonwealth Heads of Government
meeting (CHOGM) in April.
Since CHOGM, the UK and Kenya have hosted the Global Disability
Summit; Vanuatu became the first country in the world to enact a
ban on a range of single-use plastics, with other states
including India following suit; the Commonwealth SheTrades
programme has launched in Ghana, Kenya, Bangladesh and Nigeria,
with over 1300 women entrepreneurs now registered.
The Foreign Secretary also announced a £1.8m UK contribution to
the Commonwealth’s electoral observation programme.
Foreign Secretary , said:
The Commonwealth is responding to the global challenges of
today, from climate change to economic protectionism.
Five months on from the Commonwealth Heads of Government
meeting in London, the 53 countries of the Commonwealth are
taking forward real action on their commitments to a fairer,
more secure, more sustainable and prosperous future.
The Commonwealth is a unique organisation and a champion for
the rules-based international system - but it must be seen to
deliver, and then keep delivering.
The Foreign Secretary also chaired a Commonwealth Foreign
Ministers meeting, where discussion included progress on the
Commonwealth Blue Charter; increasing intra-Commonwealth trade;
addressing cyber security threats, and reform of the Commonwealth
Secretariat to ensure it is efficient and delivering for its
member states.