Former Soviet president Mikhail Gorbachev speaks
during the presentation of his new book "After the Kremlin" in a book
store in Moscow on November 20, 2014.(AFP Photo / Vasily Maximov)
|
Former
Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev says that he’s working on a strategy of
stabilizing the international situation by introducing a new effective global
dialogue platform to augment the “lame UN.”
“Serious-minded
world circles” have asked him to come up with such a
platform during the celebrations of the 25th anniversary of the fall of the
Berlin Wall earlier in November, said Gorbachev, 83.
“It’s
going to be a very big thing. There’ll be first steps and second steps, aimed
for it to become a global platform for discussion of problems. It must be very
representative, capable of influencing both state and international institutions,
authoritative because the UN is, unfortunately, lame at the moment,”
Gorbachev said during the Moscow presentation of his new book, “After the Kremlin.”
He
said his platform “would calm the world, would stop things that are going on,
would rule out such bloody events."
"Real
institutions must be created in a global world, that would help the United
Nations in decision-making, in drafting these decisions,"
Gorbachev said. "Things
will fail without civil institutions that would incorporate people's
wisdom."
Gorbachev
declined to give any names, but said that the creation of the dialogue platform
will be discussed with “very
experienced people, respected by global public opinion."
Thursday’s book presentation gathered a huge crowd, with hundreds lining up in the street outside the bookshop to get an autograph from the author, TASS news agency reported.
Despite his age, Gorbachev assured those who came that he’s in good health and his spirits remain high.
He said that coped with the pressure on him after the fall of Soviet Union in 1991, and plans “to keep living.”
Thursday’s book presentation gathered a huge crowd, with hundreds lining up in the street outside the bookshop to get an autograph from the author, TASS news agency reported.
Despite his age, Gorbachev assured those who came that he’s in good health and his spirits remain high.
He said that coped with the pressure on him after the fall of Soviet Union in 1991, and plans “to keep living.”
“I
invite you to my 90th birthday. I’m sure we’ll be celebrating it,”
he said.
Gorbachev came back into spotlight in recent months, making several high-profile comments on international events.
Gorbachev came back into spotlight in recent months, making several high-profile comments on international events.
He called Russia’s
incorporation of Ukraine’s Republic of Crimea a correction of a Soviet-era
mistake, condemned Kiev’s military operation in southeastern Ukraine and called
US President Barack Obama “a lame
duck” for finishing his second White House term in a “mediocre” way.
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