Updated 27 Sep, 2015 03:02pm

Concert to end poverty: Beyonce, Michelle Obama, Malala take the stage

NEW YORK: Some of the biggest names in music and politics from Beyonce to European prime ministers rallied Saturday in a concert aimed at mobilizing action to eradicate extreme poverty. Nobel laureate and social activist Malala Yusufzai also attended the concert and stressed on the need to invest on education.

Before thousands of people in New York's Central Park and a far greater audience on television, the Global Citizen Festival sought to use entertainment to broaden support for new United Nations development goals.

Beyonce, playing just her second concert this year, was the top attraction for many fans who obtained tickets not by paying but by committing to activism ranging from writing letters to volunteering.

Eddie Vedder of Pearl Jam (L) and Beyonce perform at the Global Citizen Festival in Central Park on Saturday. — AP

Other performers included rock veterans Pearl Jam and Coldplay, fresh English pop sensation Ed Sheeran, socially conscious rapper Common and — in an effort to raise the profile of the festival in India— popular Bollywood singer Sunidhi Chauhan.

Beyonce closed an energetic set by welcoming to the stage a surprise guest she hugged warmly — Michelle Obama.

The US first lady encouraged the audience to use social media to campaign on behalf of the estimated 62 million girls worldwide who are not in school.

US First Lady Michelle Obama speaks at the fourth annual Global Citizen Festival in Central Park Manhattan. — AFP

“They deserve the same chances to get an education as my daughters and your daughters and all of our children,” she said.

“And make no mistake about it — giving them that chance is at the core of our work to end global poverty."

Stephen Colbert, left, and Hugh Jackman appear on stage at the Global Citizen Festival. — AP

On Friday, the UN endorsed a goal of ending extreme poverty by 2030 — in part by focusing on opportunities for girls, an investment with sweeping consequences for families' futures.

Musical twists

Like many festivals, the concert thrived on musical surprises.

Pearl Jam brought back to stage Beyonce for Bob Marley's inspirational “Redemption Song,” which segued to a video of late anti-apartheid hero Nelson Mandela urging a fight against poverty.

Beyonce put on a crowd-rousing show of dance pop with an emphasis on her feminist themes but performed an unlikely acoustic duet with Sheeran of “Drunk in Love,” which she usually sings with husband Jay Z.

Ed Sheeran performs on the stage. — REUTERS

Pop starlet Ariana Grande joined Coldplay, while Common's hard-charging hip-hop set merged into “Every Breath You Take” as a bearded Sting suddenly appeared.

Chris Martin of Coldplay sings at the Global Citizen Festival. — AP

Taking the microphone in between pop stars, the youngest-ever Nobel Peace Prize winner Malala Yousafzai dramatized the plight of girls who want to go to school.

The 18-year-old Pakistani, who was shot in 2012 for defying a Taliban ban on education, said that the world did not lack money.

“We have billions and trillions of dollars but where the money goes is the military, things that are useless to society,” she said. “It is a book and a pen that can change the life of a child; it is not a gun."

Hollywood star Leonardo DiCaprio urged the world also to reach a deal on climate change, warning that rising temperatures and disasters risked making poverty all the more daunting.

Actor Leonardo DiCaprio speaks on stage during the Global Citizen Festival. — REUTERS

“Right now, Europe is paralyzed trying to absorb the influx of millions of Syrian refugees,” the Titanic star said.

“But more than one billion people, most of them in Asia, currently live in low-lying coastal regions. What will happen when they become sea-level refugees? “

U2 lead singer Bono speaks at the Global Citizen Festival. — AP
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