The measure of a nation’s character is how we respond to those who need help. In Wales, our heritage demands solidarity at home and abroad.
As too many world leaders are turning away from global solidarity, we call on the next Welsh Government to redouble efforts to make Wales a globally responsible nation.
Our solidarity manifests in all our communities across Wales. Through the revolutionary local collectivism of chapels, striking for better conditions and pay in the mines, Hedd Wyn’s seminal pacifist poetry in the face of the horrific violence of World War I, Antifascist Worker Militias in the second Spanish civil war, sheltering World War II evacuees from Britain’s cities and Jewish refugees from the Holocaust, the Wales Window for Alabama, the Wales and Lesotho country-to-country twinning initiative in 1985, and more recently welcoming Syrian and Ukrainian refugees.
The Wales and Africa Programme was established in 2006 in response to the “Make Poverty History” campaign, which saw widespread public action across Wales and the UK, calling for action against global poverty.
In 2008, Wales became the first Fair Trade Nation, and in 2015 the Wellbeing of Future Generations Act was passed to try and ensure a healthy world for our descendants.
In the 2020s, globalisation has brought challenges for us from communicable disease control to alleviating poverty, and securing our security by promoting more stable societies.
The impact of epidemics, natural disasters, such as floods or famine and man-made catastrophes, require rapid and coordinated responses from the wider health community. Wales has and does contribute to the international efforts to aid those countries and the people affected.
Through standing with others, the people of Wales gain through learning, cultural enrichment and human connections. These are our priorities for the next Welsh Government.
We’re eager to show the work we do and to make the case for global solidarity. Get in touch with us today!