The Limited Times

Now you can see non-English news...

In New York, Metallica, Mariah Carey and Joe Biden at the bedside of the planet

2022-09-25T08:10:26.993Z


After five hours of mini-concerts and consensual messages from political and corporate leaders, legendary hard rock band Metallica woke up Central Park audiences.


New York offered a giant charity concert for the climate and against poverty on Saturday by scrolling a dozen stars, from Metallica to Mariah Carey, and international leaders like Ursula von der Leyen and, via a video, the Biden couple .

Behind this event, which has been held every year for ten years at the end of the UN General Assembly, is the philanthropic NGO Global Citizen, an international digital platform created by the Australian Hugh Evans and which wants to bring together "globalized citizens" sensitized to the scourges of famine, underdevelopment, climate change or discrimination.

To win a ticket to Central Park -- the huge green lung of Manhattan -- you had to register on the Global Citizen site, sign petitions and relay messages on social networks to put pressure on political leaders and economies of the planet.

Broadcast on many TVs and platforms, the New York concert was held at the same time as another in Accra, Ghana, despite the time difference.

Metallica to electrify the crowd

President Joe Biden and his wife Jill assured in a video message that the United States was engaged in the “combat” for the climate and had adopted this summer a law comprising 369 billion dollars in investments for “ improve health, advance justice and build clean energy”.

The two leaders of the Democratic majority in the Senate and the House of Representatives, Chuck Schumer and Nancy Pelosi, came on stage in person to defend Washington's environmental policy.

Before them, the President of the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen was also at the concert in Central Park to tell the

"citizens of the world (that she had heard them)".

"We must put an end to famines (...) Europe is mobilizing 600 million euros for food security in Africa, the Caribbean and the Pacific",

she assured.

But after five hours of mini-concerts and consensual messages from political leaders and American corporate sponsors of the festival, it took the power of the metal sound of the legendary hard rock band Metallica to animate the thousands of fans gathered in Central Park.

The almost sixty-year-old Californians delighted their audience for an hour with a version of their mythical title “Nothing Else Matters” sung by Mickey Guyton, who claims the title of first black American country music artist.

Mini-concerts, global warming and Iran

Italian Eurovison winners Maneskin were also present CAITLIN OCHS / REUTERS

The "Global Citizen Festival" also vibrated thanks to the dynamic young Italian rockers of the Maneskin group and the New Yorkers of the Jonas Brothers, one of whose three brothers is married to the star of Indian Bollywood cinema, Priyanka Chopra, mistress of the ceremony in Central Park.

Popstar Mariah Carey performed an upbeat version of her classic “Hero,” accompanied by ballet dancer Misty Copeland.

Between two mini-concerts, political and economic leaders took turns on stage.

Mariah Carey CAITLIN OCHS / REUTERS

The Prime Minister of Barbados, Mia Mottley relayed the alarmist messages of her counterparts from small Pacific and Caribbean countries threatened by global warming, which they hammered home all week at the UN.

"Yes, my friends, our time is running out," she warned.

Violence against women has also been denounced: an Iranian refugee lawyer in Berlin, Anuscheh Amir-Khalili, spoke on stage of the death in Iran of the young Masha Amini arrested by the morality police, triggering demonstrations and their repression.

I saw my sisters forced to flee aggression, oppression and femicide all over the world (…) We must speak out for oppressed women,”

she said, looking serious, to applause.

Source: lefigaro

All life articles on 2022-09-25

You may like

Trends 24h

Latest

© Communities 2019 - Privacy

The information on this site is from external sources that are not under our control.
The inclusion of any links does not necessarily imply a recommendation or endorse the views expressed within them.