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The Commonwealth: towards a common future

This time last year, 46 Heads of Government and 49 Foreign Ministers gathered in London for the 25th Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting. Formally opened on 19 April by HM The Queen, this was the largest summit of its kind our country has ever hosted.

Ahead of the formal conference, a whole series of discussion forums brought together businesses, parliamentarians, women and young people, to discuss the kinds of actions we would need to take collectively to build a fairer, more sustainable, more prosperous, more secure future for us all.

Leaders made commitments to tackle a range of issues, from preserving our oceans and enhancing our cyber security, to boosting trade and investment between Commonwealth countries.

As Commonwealth Chair-in-Office, the UK has committed £500m funding to projects and programmes which will help to fulfil these commitments. And as a mark of the UK’s ongoing commitment to the Commonwealth, we are opening nine new diplomatic missions in Commonwealth countries.

A year on from that conference, and 10 months into my role as the UK’s Commonwealth Envoy, I have been reflecting on what we have achieved together so far, across our ‘connected Commonwealth’.  Here are just some examples:

A fairer future

A more sustainable future

A more prosperous future

A more secure future

These programmes span the Commonwealth and connect our people in shared goals. We still have much to do, but we are making tangible progress.

Commonwealth 70th anniversary

In the last ten months, I have met so many inspirational people and groups, from all walks of life in the Commonwealth – Queen’s Young Leaders, Commonwealth Scholars, members of the Commonwealth Youth Council, the Equality & Justice Alliance, the wide-ranging Commonwealth professional associations, and many more.

As the modern Commonwealth marks its 70th anniversary this month, we should celebrate its unity of purpose and principle amidst broad and bountiful diversity – while remaining ambitious about what more it could achieve.

Meeting Queens’ Young Leaders in Seychelles
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