Kathmandu, July 1
Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli participated
in multiple international events on global solidarity, sustainable development
and access to water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) in Seville, Spain on
Tuesday.
PM Oli is in Seville leading a Nepali
delegation to participate in the Fourth International Conference on Financing
for Development (FfD4). He is also engaged at various events organised on the
sidelines of the conference.
Speaking at an event on 'Investing in global
solidarity: A new vision of development cooperation' convened by Pedro Sanchez,
President of Spain, PM Oli highlighted the enduring value of development
cooperation.
He noted its importance, especially amidst
rising nationalism, protectionism, and global conflicts, and said that
development cooperation is not charity, instead, it is a pledge to ensure no
one is left behind in the pursuit of progress.
He characterized development cooperation as
partnerships. "These partnerships empower communities, strengthen
institutions, build capacity and foster resilience. Development cooperation is 'solidarity
in action," he said.
According to him, goals of such
coopeeration include lasting peace, shared prosperity, climate justice, and a
just, fair, and equitable world.
Prime Minister Oli acknowledged the
tangible results achieved through development cooperation over the years.
However, he also raised concerns to the fragmentation of development aid which is
spread across too many small projects and parallel channels. It also has too
many competing priorities and such fragmentation often has diluted its impact.
Likewise, he expressed his concerns to the
shift from grants to loans which is likely to affect countries already facing
unsustainable debt burdens. Expressing hopes in the 'Sevilla Commitment'
adopted on Monday, he expressed his belief that it will translate principles
into progress through global solidarity. He welcomed its focus on strengthening
international development cooperation for sustainable development.
PM Oli stressed the need to deliver on
commitments and principles of effectiveness, and called for innovative ways to
mobilise resources. "The goal is to make development cooperation
meaningful for people on the ground. Developing countries face increasing
financial stress, including rising debt. In this context, concessional finance
is essential, not optional," he said.
Meanwhile, speaking at another event, Prime
Minister Oli called for bold and urgent action to support the world's Least
Developed Countries (LDCs).
Highlighting that development aid is drying
up, remittance costs remain high, and climate injustice disproportionately
affects LDCs, he said, “This is not just a fiscal crisis, it is a human one."
Calling for stronger domestic resource
mobilisation, more grants, and private investment, PM Oli said, “With the right
financing, we can invest in people and create lasting opportunity.” He urged
world leaders to act decisively to build a fairer and more sustainable future.
Commitment to WASH
Meanwhile, Prime Minister Oli co-organised
and spoke at a side event. The event focused on the Sanitation and Water for
All (SWA) Initiative was jointly organised by the Governments of Nepal and
Burundi in collaboration with the SWA.
PM Oli noted that billions worldwide still
lack access to basic WASH facilities, with over 2 billion people lacking safe
drinking water and 3.5 billion without safely managed sanitation. "Waterborne
diseases and poor sanitation continue to pose a major public health crisis,
leading to preventable deaths, particularly among children. To achieve
universal WASH coverage by 2030, progress needs to accelerate by as much as
six-fold, demanding collective global action," he said.
Stating that Nepal's constitution
recognises access to clean water and sanitation as a fundamental right, he said
the nation is determined to realise its aspiration of 'Prosperous Nepal, Happy
Nepali' by ensuring every household has essential services, including WASH. The
country has already achieved 96 per cent basic water supply coverage as of
2024, though challenges remain in delivering quality and sustainable services.
In his address, Prime Minister Oli called
upon all development partners to continue their support to Nepal in building
the necessary infrastructure and strengthening institutions to achieve these
shared goals.
Published in The Rising Nepal daily on 2 July 2025.