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Demands for debt cancellation and climate action by protesters ahead of UN summit

On Sunday, activists marched through Seville, southern Spain, in scorching heat, demanding debt cancellation, climate justice, and taxing super-rich people on the eve a UN summit about financing development, which critics claim lacks ambition.

The four-day summit, held every ten years, promises to tackle poverty and disease by defining the global framework for sustainable development. The United States' decision not to attend the summit and the shrinking appetite of wealthy countries for foreign aid has dampened expectations that it will lead to significant changes.

Greenpeace members sat on a globe and carried a float that depicted Elon Musk, the billionaire, as a baby holding a chainsaw. Other banners read "Make Human Rights Great again", "Tax Justice Now" or "Make Polluters Pay".

Beauty Narteh, of Ghana's Anti-Corruption Coalition, said that her group wanted "dignity and not handouts" in the tax system.

Sokhna Nidiaye of the Africa Development Interchange Network called on public and private sector to "show more solidarity and less selfishness" towards developing countries.

The Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez had said earlier that the fact that this event is taking place while conflicts are raging around the world is reason for hope.

Sanchez, speaking at an event organized by the non-profit Global Citizen reaffirmed Madrid's commitment of reaching 0.7% GDP in development assistance and encouraged other countries to follow suit.

Jason Braganza of the pan-African advocacy organization AFRODAD, who participated in the yearlong negotiations on the final outcome document for the conference, claimed that countries such as the U.S. and the European Union, along with Britain, had blocked efforts to organize a UN convention regarding sovereign debt.

He added, "It is a shame that these countries chose to protect themselves and their creditors' interests over the lives of people who are dying." Reporting by David Latona, Silvio Castellanos and Andrea Ricci

(source: Reuters)