Newspectives: Developing nations criticize unilateral sanctions, urging equitable global economic policies and cooperation mechanisms.

Developing nations, particularly members of BRICS and G77+China, are consistently criticizing unilateral sanctions, emphasizing their negative impact on economic development, human rights, and the achievement of Sustainable Development Goals. These groups are actively advocating for profound reforms in global economic governance and for strengthened cooperation mechanisms to foster a more equitable, multipolar, and inclusive international order.

Common Ground perspective

Developing nations, particularly members of BRICS and G77+China, are consistently criticizing unilateral sanctions, emphasizing their negative impact on economic development, human rights, and the achievement of Sustainable Development Goals. These groups are actively advocating for profound reforms in global economic governance and for strengthened cooperation mechanisms to foster a more equitable, multipolar, and inclusive international order.

Sources: mronline.org, cubaminrex.cu, plenglish.com, ultimasnoticias.com.ve

USA perspective

Mainstream US media is analytically covering the growing discontent among developing nations regarding American unilateral sanctions, acknowledging their reported negative humanitarian and economic impacts. The narrative frequently frames these criticisms within broader geopolitical dynamics and the debate over US foreign policy, particularly concerning multilateralism versus national interests.

Sources: chinaglobalsouth.com, regtechtimes.com, unctad.org, iranintl.com

United Kingdom perspective

British media, led by outlets such as The Guardian and BBC, is analyzing the escalating critique from developing nations regarding unilateral sanctions and the existing global economic framework, emphasizing calls for more equitable policies and multilateral cooperation. This comes as civil society groups also pressure the UK government to better support debt relief and financial reforms for poorer countries, despite the UK's ongoing commitment to its own sanctions regimes.

Sources: unctad.org, un.org, theguardian.com, gazetteandherald.co.uk

Russia perspective

Russian state-affiliated media jubilantly reports on developing nations, particularly BRICS, actively denouncing unilateral Western sanctions and pushing for a more equitable global economic framework. This movement is framed as a triumphant assertion of sovereignty against Western dominance, with Russia positioned as a key leader in establishing a new multipolar world order.

Sources: Bloomberg: BRICS countries intend to condemn unilateral economic measures, BRICS summit condemned attacks on infrastructure in the Russian Federation - Korrespondent.net, Representatives of BRICS countries approved a declaration on strengthening multilateralism - Vedomosti, BRICS countries condemned all unilateral sanctions in world trade - Seldon.News, Trade war of the White House and the historical response of the BRICS countries - Eurasia24, The West's attempts to preserve a unipolar world beneficial to it undermine the authority and Charter of the UN - RSMD, Deputy Head of the Ministry of Economic Development of the Russian Federation: any climate finance targets must remain voluntary - Interfax, Moscow reacted to US and EU sanctions - Korrespondent.net, Putin believes that the West uses unfair competition to maintain monopoly | Realnoe Vremya | Zen, Regular press conference on November 28, 2025 by Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Mao Ning, How sanctions against Russia forced Western partners of an exemplary Chinese refinery to flee the country | ProFinance.Ru, Russia and India: Intolerable (outside the scope) - Russia in Global Affairs

China perspective

Chinese state media is robustly reporting on developing nations' widespread criticism of unilateral sanctions, framing these measures as illegal, hegemonic tools of Western powers that violate international law and harm global development. China asserts its role as a steadfast supporter of the Global South, advocating for multilateralism, equitable economic policies, and inclusive cooperation mechanisms to build a more just and stable international order.

Sources: cgtn.com, huanqiu.com, people.com.cn, news.cn

Israel perspective

Current Israeli media coverage does not prominently feature developing nations' criticism of unilateral sanctions or their calls for equitable global economic policies. The discourse remains centered on domestic affairs, security, and specific international legal challenges directly impacting Israel, overshadowing this broader economic discussion.

Sources: idi.org.il, inss.org.il, idi.org.il

Arab World perspective

Arab media widely condemns unilateral sanctions imposed by powerful nations, viewing them as illegal tools that inflict severe economic and humanitarian damage on developing countries. The region advocates strongly for a reformed, multilateral global economic order to ensure justice and equitable development for all nations.

Sources: abna24.com, peoplesdispatch.org, ohchr.org, twn.my

The Jester perspective (satire — not factual reporting)

In a stunning display of diplomatic déjà vu, the world's 'developing' nations have convened to express their profound shock that unilateral sanctions continue to be... unilateral, and sanctions. Their urgent demands for 'equitable global economic policies' are, naturally, accompanied by proposals for more 'cooperation mechanisms,' ensuring that global elites will have plenty of new committees to politely ignore while the status quo grinds on.

Sources: peoplesdispatch.org, ajee-journal.com, ohchr.org, chinadiplomacy.org.cn

JAPAN perspective

Japanese media presents Japan as a key partner advocating for an equitable global economic environment, particularly through its engagement in development conferences and climate finance. It highlights Japan's commitment to supporting developing nations as they navigate the complexities of global power dynamics and economic pressures.

Sources: youtube.com, youtube.com, youtube.com

NETHERLANDS perspective

Dutch media reports reflect growing international criticism from developing nations against unilateral sanctions and coercive measures, with Latin American leaders and UN officials highlighting their negative impact on human rights and development. Concurrently, the Netherlands faces internal scrutiny over its substantial cuts to development aid, raising concerns about its commitment to equitable global economic policies and cooperation.

Sources: latinamericanpost.com, twn.my, youtube.com, bothends.org

Sources

All primary sources cited across the perspectives on this page:

  1. mronline.org
  2. cubaminrex.cu
  3. plenglish.com
  4. ultimasnoticias.com.ve
  5. chinaglobalsouth.com
  6. regtechtimes.com
  7. unctad.org
  8. iranintl.com
  9. unctad.org
  10. un.org
  11. theguardian.com
  12. gazetteandherald.co.uk
  13. Bloomberg: BRICS countries intend to condemn unilateral economic measures
  14. BRICS summit condemned attacks on infrastructure in the Russian Federation - Korrespondent.net
  15. Representatives of BRICS countries approved a declaration on strengthening multilateralism - Vedomosti
  16. BRICS countries condemned all unilateral sanctions in world trade - Seldon.News
  17. Trade war of the White House and the historical response of the BRICS countries - Eurasia24
  18. The West's attempts to preserve a unipolar world beneficial to it undermine the authority and Charter of the UN - RSMD
  19. Deputy Head of the Ministry of Economic Development of the Russian Federation: any climate finance targets must remain voluntary - Interfax
  20. Moscow reacted to US and EU sanctions - Korrespondent.net
  21. Putin believes that the West uses unfair competition to maintain monopoly | Realnoe Vremya | Zen
  22. Regular press conference on November 28, 2025 by Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Mao Ning
  23. How sanctions against Russia forced Western partners of an exemplary Chinese refinery to flee the country | ProFinance.Ru
  24. Russia and India: Intolerable (outside the scope) - Russia in Global Affairs
  25. cgtn.com
  26. huanqiu.com
  27. people.com.cn
  28. news.cn
  29. idi.org.il
  30. inss.org.il
  31. idi.org.il
  32. abna24.com
  33. peoplesdispatch.org
  34. ohchr.org
  35. twn.my
  36. peoplesdispatch.org
  37. ajee-journal.com
  38. ohchr.org
  39. chinadiplomacy.org.cn
  40. youtube.com
  41. youtube.com
  42. youtube.com
  43. latinamericanpost.com
  44. twn.my
  45. youtube.com
  46. bothends.org