FAILURE NOT AN OPTION ON ROAD TO 2015, GENERAL ASSEMBLY PRESIDENT SAYS, AS HE PROPOSES ANNUAL ‘STOCK-TAKING’ DEBATES ON MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS
Warning that failure was not an option on the path to achieving the ambitious Millennium Development Goals by the 2015 target year, General Assembly President Srgjan Kerim proposed today the convening of annual debates until 2015 to take stock of global progress and hold all development partners to account.
(Media-Newswire.com) - Warning that failure was not an option on the path to achieving the ambitious Millennium Development Goals by the 2015 target year, General Assembly President Srgjan Kerim proposed today the convening of annual debates until 2015 to take stock of global progress and hold all development partners to account.
Addressing the resumed session of the thematic debate titled “Recognizing the achievements, addressing the challenges and getting back on track to achieve the Millennium Development Goals by 2015”, he said mutual accusations were useless and mutual accountability essential. “We need to urgently translate political commitments -– made at the highest level -– into results on the ground.”
Several Government ministers, speaking on behalf of various regional groups, noted progress in their respective efforts to achieve that goal, but also highlighted the challenges thwarting implementation. For example, Joanne Massiah, Minister for Agriculture, Lands, Marine Resources and Agro Industry of Antigua and Barbuda, said on behalf of the “Group of 77” developing countries and China that the international community was far from making good on the $50 billion worth of official development assistance it had promised for the attainment of the Millennium targets. Moreover, the money that had already been delivered was heavily reliant on debt cancellation and thus detracted from resources available for achieving the Goals. International financial institutions must create adequate strategies for developing countries, as well as a monitoring mechanism to track and promote implementation by all stakeholders. Developed countries should be evaluated not only on their implementation of the Monterrey Consensus, but also on progress made towards achieving Goal 8 -- developing a global partnership for development.
Ifthekar Ahmed Chowdhury, Minister for Foreign Affairs of Bangladesh, said on behalf of the Least Developed Countries that, in order to move from rhetoric to action, developed countries must fulfil their development aid commitments, cancel the debts of least developed countries without discrimination and ensure their quota- and duty-free access to markets. Developed nations must also create innovative financial structures to better assist their less developed partners with such challenges as climate change and structural deficiencies, which risked reversing any progress previously made towards attaining the Goals. Many developing countries had already instituted reforms to promote good governance and human rights, but their lack of financial and human resources made it difficult to achieve health-related goals, while the unpredictability of external resources made universal primary education highly unlikely.
Ziga Turk, Slovenia’s Minister for Growth, said on behalf of the European Union that its members and the European Commission were trying to better align their development cooperation with the overall object of the Millennium Goals. In 2005, the European Union had committed to devoting 0.56 per cent of gross domestic product to official development assistance by 2010 and to reaching the 0.7 per cent target by 2015. Aid effectiveness was also essential, and it was important for development results to ensure a just division of labour among donors, aid predictability, enhanced use of country systems and mutual accountability. In the past 30 years alone, developing countries had made remarkable, albeit uneven, improvements in living standards. Those highly encouraging results demonstrated that poverty could be overcome.
Mexico’s representative, speaking on behalf of the Rio Group, said development must be a responsibility shared among all countries. It was essential to adhere to the Paris Declaration and to take into account the diverse situation of countries of the global South. More than 40 per cent of the world’s poor lived in middle-income countries, and their specific needs must not be forgotten. The Rio Group was doing its part to eliminate the conditions that caused poverty, social exclusion and inequality, and to create favourable environments for socio-economic development. The Group’s members were also working to set up joint mechanisms to increase public access to essential public services, such as education and health, and to achieve gender equality and women’s empowerment. The Millennium Goals were a useful guide for setting minimum standards, but it was alarming that many countries were not on track to achieve them.
Sweden’s representative, speaking on behalf of the Nordic countries, said the Goals concerning gender equality could not be achieved without broader enjoyment of sexual and reproductive health and rights. The ability of women to control their own fertility and access to reproductive health services was necessary in order significantly to reduce maternal and child mortality rates. Every year, 500,000 women, more than 9 per cent of them in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia, died from complications related to pregnancy or childbirth. Access for young men and women to contraceptives, comprehensive sex education and confidential reproductive health services were also crucial to reducing adolescent birth rates. Sexual and reproductive health education and access to related health services were the best way to prevent HIV/AIDS. The Nordic countries had put sexual and reproductive health and rights at the centre of international development cooperation.
Ministers from Albania, Cambodia, Barbados and the United Arab Emirates also made statements, as did a vice-minister from Guatemala and deputy ministers from Ukraine, Sierra Leone, Lao People’s Democratic Republic and Egypt.
High-level officials from Colombia, United Kingdom, Nigeria and Burundi also spoke.
Other speakers were the representatives of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Austria, Mali ( on behalf of landlocked developing countries ), Tonga ( on behalf of the Pacific small island developing States ), Democratic Republic of Congo ( on behalf of the African Group ), Pakistan, Jamaica, Philippines, Uganda, India, Australia, Namibia, Brazil, Bhutan, San Marino, Kazakhstan, Morocco, Mauritius, Liechtenstein, Mongolia, Chile, Libya, Iceland, Sri Lanka, France, Indonesia, Netherlands, Israel, Kuwait, Ecuador, Germany, Thailand, Cuba, Ghana, Turkey, Japan, Nicaragua, Peru, Iran, Norway, Canada, Sudan, Malaysia and Tajikistan.
The Assembly will meet again at 10 a.m. tomorrow, Thursday, 3 April, to take action on a draft resolution presented by its Fifth Committee ( Administrative and Budgetary ) and conclude its thematic debate.
Background
The General Assembly today resumed its thematic debate entitled “Recognizing the achievements, addressing the challenges and getting back on track to achieve the Millennium Development Goals by 2015” in a plenary session.
Opening the session, the President of the General Assembly, SRGJAN KERIM, said “failure was not an option” and all stakeholders needed to scale up efforts and accelerate progress. Mutual accusations were useless and mutual accountability essential. “We need to urgently translate political commitments -– made at the highest level -– into results on the ground,” he stressed. 2008 was the year when concrete results needed to be delivered on the ground, though efforts to implement the Millennium Goals should not stop there. To that end, the President proposed annual thematic debates on the Millennium Development Goals until 2015, to take stock of progress made and to hold all partners to account.
Statements
JOANNE MASSIAH, Minister of Agriculture, Lands, Marine Resources and Agro Industry for Antigua and Barbuda, speaking on behalf of the “Group of 77” developing countries and China, said a lack of sufficient resources was delaying progress in achieving the Millennium Development Goals. Developed and developing countries shared responsibility for achieving those Goals. To date, developing countries had made significant progress, but commitments by developed countries to increase the provision of resources had not yet been fulfilled and the international financial environment was still not transparent, stable or predictable enough.
Official development assistance was indispensable for achieving the Millennium Development Goals, she continued. The international community was far from making good on the $50 billion worth of assistance it had promised, and money that had already been delivered was heavily reliant on debt cancellation and thus detracted from resources available for achieving the Millennium Goals. To ensure that all developing countries made progress, global economic growth needed to reach the poorest. It was critical for international financial institutions to establish adequate financial strategies for developing countries and to develop a monitoring mechanism to track and promote implementation by all stakeholders, developed countries included. Developed countries should be evaluated not only on their implementation of the Monterrey Consensus, but also on the progress made on Millennium Goal 8, developing a global partnership for development.
ZIGA TURK, Minister of Growth of Slovenia, speaking on behalf of the European Union, said that the Union’s members and European Commission were trying to better align their development cooperation with the overall objective of poverty eradication and the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals. The Union had also committed, again in 2005, to scaling up its aid and collectively contributing 0.56 per cent gross national income to official development assistance by 2010, and to reach the target of 0.7 per cent gross national income by 2015. The Union was currently providing 57 per cent of global official development assistance and invited others to follow suit. However, progress towards the Millennium Development Goals was not just about increasing the volume of official development assistance -– it was also about improving aid effectiveness. Of particular importance was progress on four key aspects of the Paris Declaration of aid effectiveness: division of labour among donors, predictability on aid, enhanced use of country systems and mutual accountability for development results.
Through important, foreign aid alone could not deliver the Millennium Development Goals and could only be a complement to national efforts, he continued. It was also important to remember that all eight Millennium Development Goals were closely interlinked and required a comprehensive approach towards sustainable development. The achievement of poverty eradication depended on the existence of integrated and mutually reinforcing social, economic and environmental national strategies, with particular focus on a pro-poor growth perspective, productive employment and decent work, and social inclusion policies. Learning and education should be at the heart of all development agendas, and the Union’s priorities included quality primary education, vocational training and addressing inequalities within holistic national sector plans. Particular attention was devoted to girls’ education, children with special needs, safety at school and education in fragile States.
Continuing, he addressed the efforts to reduce child and maternal mortality, improve maternal health and combat HIV/AIDS and infectious diseases. The 2000 goal to reduce maternal mortality ratio by 75 per cent between 1990 and 2015 had been followed in 2006 by the addition of a target for universal access to reproductive health. Despite those commitments, complications of pregnancy and childbirth were still the leading cause of death among women in developing countries. No region thus far had achieved sufficient declines to reach the Millennium Development Goal 5 target. That issue needed to be prioritized in budgets and in endeavours to overcome the lack of political will. Progress in combating HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseases had been facilitated by a substantive increase in resources from international donors. While additional resources were still needed, it was necessary to continue to help countries to implement strategies based on knowledge; develop comprehensive and multisectoral programmes; and ensure coordination among different stakeholders. Inclusive country-led strategies, based on the “three ones principle”, were key.
In conclusion, he said that, in the past 30 years alone, life expectancy had increased by more than 20 years; infant mortality had dropped by half; and primary school enrolment had doubled. Developing countries had achieved remarkable, although uneven, improvements in living standards of their people. Those results were highly encouraging, demonstrating that poverty could be overcome. But the battle was far from over. The year 2008 was a crucial year to make progress in achieving the Millennium Development Goals. Their achievement was still possible in most countries, but only if concerted and well-targeted actions were increased immediately and sustained until 2015.
IFTHEKAR AHMED CHOWDHURY, Minister for Foreign Affairs of Bangladesh and speaking on behalf of the least developed countries, said, though there had been some progress made in achieving the Millennium Development Goals, the absolute number of poor in the world continued to grow and the group of least developed countries still faced huge structural impediments to development. Climate change and global warming were new challenges and they risked reversing any progress previously made in achieving the Millennium Goals. To ensure progress moving forward, the current discourse needed to be depoliticized and should focus more on the special needs of developing countries, especially the least developed countries.
Running down the list of Goals to be achieved by 2015, he said there was much that still needed to be done. In terms of health, an ongoing lack of financial and human resources made progress difficult. In education, as well, the unpredictability of external resources made the goal of universal primary education highly unlikely. Reform measures to promote good governance and human rights in developing countries were already in place in many countries. However, promises by developed countries of external resources remained elusive and market access remained blocked. To move from rhetoric to action, developed countries should fulfil their official development assistance commitments, cancel the debts of the least developed countries without discrimination, ensure quota free and duty free access to markets for the least developed countries, and establish new financial structures to better assist developing countries on their path to development.
RANKO SKRBIC ( Bosnia and Herzegovina ) said that, according to a recent multiple-indicator cluster survey, the prevalence of children under the age of five who were underweight was 0.4 per cent in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and the coverage for measles vaccine was 75 per cent. Nearly 99 per cent of the population had access to safe drinking water, and 93 per cent were living in households with safe sewage. The prevalence of households in “poor areas” was 15.8 per cent. Nearly 100 per cent of the births were doctor, nurse or midwife-assisted delivery. Nearly 99 per cent of children of primary school age were attending school, and all children who entered the first grade reached grade five. Approximately 34 per cent of young women in Bosnia and Herzegovina knew all three of the main ways to prevent HIV/AIDS transmission, and the rate of infant mortality was declining. Significant efforts had been invested in developing and implementing policies, health-care development strategies and normative legal regulations. There was also a multiparty effort to coordinate the country’s health strategies and activities at various levels.
He said the falling natural growth rate was an unfavourable demographic trend that could have significant consequences in the future. Also, the development of democracy and an emphasis on the individual rights of community members would bring about both opportunities and threats. Today’s socio-cultural changes had led to the higher level of information to the public and higher demands for the health system, but at the same time undermined the structure of the family and led to an increasing frequency of risky behaviour, such as unhealthy eating habits, reduced physical activity and diverse forms of addiction. Socio-cultural changes were also the major cause of the unfavourable demographic trends. None of the developed societies escaped the trend towards low fertility.
How was it possible that the number of newborns was so low, while studies showed that only 9.4 per cent of women of reproductive age who are either married or living with a partner used any of the modern methods of contraception? he asked. Was it possible that the predominant manner of family planning was abortion? In which cases, while the idea of freedom of the individual was essentially well-intended, one had to think also about how that freedom limited the freedom of others.
MAJLINDA BREGU, Minister of European Integration of Albania, said her country had set up a national strategy for development and European integration, as well as a national plan to implement the Stabilization and Association Agreement with the European Union. At the midway point of the target date for the Millennium Development Goals, it was necessary to take stock of progress thus far in achieving the Goals, as well as to identify future steps to progress further and faster with implementation, nationally and globally. Albania was using the millennium targets not only as a framework, but also as a tool for development. Albania was probably the only case in which the Goals were being used to promote local development, through regional development strategies. The main purpose of the subnational reports was to show how the Millennium Development Goals could be used to build support and momentum from the bottom up, assess local poverty challenges and serve as an engine for comprehensive local development. Albania had integrated the Goals into its National Strategy for Development and Integration.
In 2007, the Albanian economy had demonstrated good growth, at 6 per cent, she said. Macroeconomic stability had been achieved and structural reforms were making the Albanian economy more efficient. The National Strategy aimed to achieve universal adult literacy, nine years of compulsory education and a 90 per cent high-school graduation rate. The 2008 budget for education was 4 per cent of gross domestic product, up from 2.4 per cent in 2004. The Government aimed to set the 2009 education budget at 5 per cent. Investment in higher education had also increased. The National Strategy aimed to reduce maternal mortality significantly by 2015 through health-care sector reforms. The 2008 budget for investment in health care was 60 per cent higher than in past years. Nurses’ salaries would double this year and physicians’ salaries would be significantly higher.
CHHAY THAN, Minister of Planning of Cambodia, said that, during the last decade, with the strengthening of peace, stability, national unification, democracy and respect for human rights, Cambodia’s gross domestic product growth reached an average of 10.6 per cent during 2003 to 2006, and then 10.1 per cent in 2007. To implement the Rome Declaration, the Government had decided to prepare a single National Development Plan for 2006 to 2010 that would serve as a framework for alignment of all official development assistance-supported activities. The Government was strongly committed to achieving the Cambodia Millennium Development Goals by adopting those goals and targets as the key pillars for the country’s National Development Policy and Strategy. The present performance in relation to the Goals had been mixed and uneven. There had been significant improvements in poverty rates in the urban areas, especially in Phnom Penh, and more accessible rural areas. There had also been significant reduction in the mortality rates of both infants and children under five years of age, although the figures remained high. There had also been progress in immunization against major childhood diseases, breastfeeding, and reduction of gender disparities in most areas, especially in primary education, adult literacy and wage employment.
In parallel to those achievements, however, many shortcomings and challenges remained to be overcome for Cambodia to realize the agreed goals and targets, he continued. Those included the high rural poverty rate, currently at 39 per cent, limited progress in achieving universal nine-year basic education, particularly those beyond primary education, and limited access to quality health services, especially with regard to women and maternal health. Cambodia’s progress towards the Goals was constrained by a chronic shortage of investment to meet priority requirements. Financial, technical and other support from development partners and the global community was required to complement the Government’s pro-Goal national strategy. A collective effort was the key to achieving the Goals and ensuring sustained growth and stability in Cambodia.
DENIS LOWE, Minister of Social Care, Constituency Empowerment and Urban Development of Barbados, warned that climate change, food insecurity and high energy costs threatened to derail progress already made by some countries in attaining the Millennium Development Goals. His Government believed that the eradication of extreme poverty and hunger was the most critical Millennium Goal. On a national level, recently implemented policies and programmes had already produced positive results. Further improvements in those programmes were expected to include safety nets and structures to empower constituents to contribute more to their own development.
Barbados had made significant progress in the education sector, as well, he continued. Already there was universal access to primary and secondary education, tuition-free post-secondary education, and a strong commitment to achieving universal pre-primary education for children between the ages of three and five. Good health was considered a human right in Barbados and universal access to health care had been in place for many years. However, the prevalence of HIV/AIDS in the country continued to be of great concern. He added that the needs of countries that are “MDG-plus” –- countries that had set national targets that were more ambitious than the Millennium Goals –- were often not adequately addressed by the international community. He, therefore, called on countries of the north and south to build stronger development partnerships to help countries reach the benchmarks laid out in the Millennium Goals and beyond.
MAITHA SALEM ALSHAMSI, Minister of State of the United Arab Emirates, said that the eradication of poverty and hunger would help reinforce global peace and the maintenance of security. She urged developed countries to fulfil their commitments on official development assistance and debt cancellation or alleviation, while opening up global markets in a just and equitable manner. Developing countries had the responsibility to adopt economic policies that encouraged production and attracted foreign investment and support for the private sector.
On a national level, her Government had made significant progress in achieving the Millennium Goals in a short period of time. The development of a strong economic policy had encouraged outside investment and helped maintain political and social security. It had also contributed to the total eradication of poverty and had raised the average income per capita to the highest level of any country in the Middle East. Free primary education was available to all citizens, child mortality rates had been successfully reduced, and 94 per cent of children had received vaccinations against childhood diseases. Her country also contributed 3.6 per cent of its gross national product for development assistance to developing countries and she welcomed today’s debate as an opportunity for all Member States to take stock of what had been achieved so far.
IRYNA KRYUCHKOVA, Deputy Minister of Ukraine, said her country was one of the first countries of the former Soviet Union to sign on to the Millennium Development Goals. The Government had adopted the Millennium Development Goals Ukraine 2005 plus report and the Millennium Development Goals 2007 report. It was important to establish international agreement on the Goals, as well as to have the institutional capacity to monitor them. Ukraine was adapting the Goals to its local needs and had set up several sub-task indicators to do so. Ukraine was working to achieve poverty reduction, environmental conservation, reduced maternal mortality, lower infant mortality and a limit to the spread of HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis. It had set long-term timelines for research and monitoring. The Prime Minister had put in place the “Ukraine Breakthrough” programme, a 100-day plan to reduce poverty, close the income gap and improve social standards. It had also launched medium-term programmes to increase Ukraine’s competitiveness by 2015, in order to achieve European integration.
The Government also aimed to halve the number of people living on less than $4.30 daily from 11.9 per cent of the population in 2000 to 5.5 per cent in 2015, she said. Further, it aimed to reduce by one third the number of people living below the poverty line. In the last four years, real income had increased eightfold. The Government had adopted measures to increase the minimum old-age pension to the minimum subsistence level. It was also increasing social services and benefits for families and children, in a bid to reduce income inequalities and raise the living standards of many. It was trying to ensure quality education, including higher education, and to align its education system with the needs of the labour market and with European standards. Efforts were under way to implement the terms of the Kyoto Protocol; increase the number of people with access to clean water; and reduce air pollution. Further, there had been progress in reducing infant mortality. Ukraine had one of the highest levels of HIV/AIDS in Europe. There were 13,800 cases of HIV/AIDS in 2005 and 16,100 cases in 2006. The number of tuberculosis cases fell in 2006, but the situation was still not satisfactory. Ukraine was developing a national programme to address that situation, but it needed international assistance, as well. Also, in 2005, Ukraine’s Parliament adopted a gender equality law.
RICHARD KONTEH, Deputy Minister of Finance and Economic Development of Sierra Leone, said that his country, having recently emerged from over 11 years of conflict, ranked at the bottom of the Human Development Index with high levels of poverty, illiteracy, and maternal, child and mortality rates. Despite having improved the levels of democracy and good governance in the country, his Government still had a number of key challenges to tackle in order to achieve the Millennium Development Goals. Among its short- and medium-term priorities were to better use energy as a vehicle for economic growth and development, to provide safe access to water supplies, to revitalize the agricultural sector, and to improve access to health and education.
He recognized the significant role that the private sector could play as a catalyst of growth, but admitted that, currently, the private sector in Sierra Leone was still too weak. Despite that fact, Sierra Leone had made significant progress towards achieving the Millennium Goals, including, among others, reductions in the child mortality rate and improved access to clean water. There were, however, a number of daunting challenges ahead, such as the rapidly increasing price of oil and food commodities, as well as the unpredictable and short-term aid delivered for development. His Government had instituted a number of national plans and measures to get the country back on track for achieving the Millennium Goals, but he stressed that Sierra Leone could not do it alone, as it needed the requisite financial and technical support to achieve its aims.
BOUNKEUT SANGSOMSAK, Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs of Lao People’s Democratic Republic, said that, since their adoption in 2000, his Government had attached great importance to the effective implementation of the Millennium Development Goals. It had customized and incorporated them into the national poverty eradication policy, including the five-year national socio-economic development plan, which constituted the Government’s strategy to achieve sustainable poverty eradication through accelerated economic growth. That plan gave priority to 47 districts identified as the poorest in the country, with a view to ensuring their progressive integration into the national economy. As a road map in achieving the Millennium Development Goals, the national five-year socio-economic development plan was implemented through 11 programmes, made up of 111 concrete projects to be carried out at the central through the local levels. In carrying out the national poverty eradication strategy, the Government had exerted every effort in addressing the issue of financing. In that regard, it had strongly promoted investment in small and medium enterprises in the rural areas, as well as in areas of national comparative advantage and emerging potential, such as hydropower and ecotourism.
The implementation of the Millennium Development Goals in his country had been steady, he continued. Since the release of the first Millennium Development Goals report in 2004, his country had been successful in sustaining robust economic growth, with real gross domestic product growth of 8 per cent in 2007. The poverty rate had been reduced from 48 per cent in 1990 to 28.7 per cent in 2007, while the net enrolment in primary schools rose from 58 per cent in 1991 to 84 per cent in 2005. Despite that steady growth, however, challenges remained. One such challenge was to sustain the level of economic growth achieved over the previous decade in the face of high oil and food prices. Also, the Government must address the disparity between people living in urban and rural areas, in terms of their ability to reap the benefits of economic growth to improve their livelihoods, including health and education. The international community needed to help his country address specific constraints he had outlined.
RAMZY EZZELDIN RAMZY, Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs for International Economic Relations and Cooperation of Egypt, said many developing countries, in recognition of the primary responsibility they had for their own development, had designed and implemented various policies and strategies to improve the living standards of their citizens. However, it was becoming increasingly hard for them to strike a balance between their national policies and international commitments. The efforts of developing countries to eradicate poverty required an enabling and complementary international environment. Currently, the developing world lacked the representation to influence economic decision-making, and the efforts of the United Nations to act on their behalf to help eradicate global poverty were much appreciated.
It had been proven that eradicating poverty could positively influence the achievement of the other Millennium Goals, he continued. Joint international efforts to enhance and build the national capacities of developing countries could also help developing countries make improvements in the education and health care sectors. It was essential that the international community attach greater importance to the challenges faced by developing countries, in the same manner that it had recently attached to such issues as climate change. The role of the United Nations in following up on the implementation of the outcomes of various conferences and summits in the economic and social fields was also essential. Though he expressed support for the current thematic debate, he added that it would have been improved had it directly addressed the global partnership for development, which required both developed and developing countries to make good on their commitments. In conclusion, he stressed the need for a new international consensus for the post-2015 phase, one that would better take into consideration the interests of middle-income countries, where half of the world’s poor lived.
CAROLINA RENTERIA, Director-General of the National Planning Department of Colombia, said Colombia was committed to translating the economic growth it had experienced -- 5.3 per cent on average annually in the past five years and 7.5 per cent in 2007 -- into strong socio-economic benefits for its population. The Millennium Development Goals agenda was an essential part of social and development policies. Colombia aimed to match the Goals with national strategies for reducing poverty and promoting equality. In March 2005, the Government created the National Development Plan 2006-2010. Social investment, which accounted for 56 per cent of investment resources, would be focused on groups and regions with the largest inequity gaps. The Government was making progress in implementing the millennium targets, and would achieve some of them by 2010. For example, extreme poverty had dropped from 21.6 per cent in 2002 to 12 per cent in 2006. More than $10 billion had been targeted to reduce extreme poverty to 8 per cent by 2010.
In 1996, basic education was offered to 80 per cent of the population, she said. That percentage rose to 96 per cent in 2006. Colombia had invested $25 billion for the 2007-2010 period to guarantee universal basic education. By 2009, Colombia would achieve universal health-care coverage, she said, adding that $16.5 billion more would be invested up to 2010 to achieve that goal. Universal health coverage would enable Colombia to improve maternal and child health, as well as treat such priority diseases as HIV/AIDS, dengue fever and malaria. Further, the Government would invest significantly to improve basic housing and sanitation. Colombia had made strides in environmental conservation, reforesting more than 30,000 hectares in recent years and incorporating into its national parks system more than one million hectares. From 2003 to 2006, it had reduced the use of ozone-depleting substances by 44 per cent and aimed to completely eliminate them by 2010.
GARETH THOMAS, Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for the United Kingdom, said the pace of progress had been too slow and it was time to reignite international attention, enthusiasm and action to achieve the Millennium Development Goals. “We will only achieve the progress we all want if we can increase aid,” he warned. The United Kingdom was on track to reach its official development assistance targets, but a concerted effort was now needed across the international community to meet all the pledges made in 2005.
In January of 2008, the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom joined the Secretary-General to launch a year of action on the Millennium Development Goals, he explained. His Government was planning to host a meeting in May to showcase how the private sector could support growth and reduce poverty in developing countries and it would also take part in a number of other international conferences on the Millennium Goals throughout the remainder of the year. However, it was imperative that those meetings move beyond words and help set out specific commitments and practical plans for action. “Today, we have the knowledge, we have the technology and we have the wealth to make a difference for millions of people,” he said. “We must now demonstrate the political will and to turn our promises into action.”
MARIO ROLANDO PIVARAL MUNOZ, Vice Minister for Global and Sectoral Policies of the Secretariat of Planning and Programming of Guatemala, said his country was on track to achieving most of the Millennium Goals by 2015, assuming three specific conditions were met: that inclusive economic growth -- especially in the agriculture sector -- was accelerated and sustained until 2015; that national policies of income redistribution were designed and implemented; and that a high degree of investment was made in coordinated and proven social policies. Only through coordinated action could economic growth be improved, poverty and inequality be eradicated, and employment opportunities enhanced.
Guatemala had achieved important progress in the areas of health, education and institutional development, he said. However, 10 years after signing the Peace Accords, the country still faced challenges to consolidating the rule of law and deepening democracy. It was, therefore, necessary to transform health, education and mortality indicators to reinforce the relevance of democratization. Democracy on an international level should lead to greater access by developing countries to international decision-making structures, greater access to free trade, as well as access to technology. “In short,” he concluded, “we need the conditions that will facilitate the conjugation of countries’ internal efforts with a genuine partnership with the principal developed countries.”
HAJIYA AMINA, Senior Special Assistant to the President of Nigeria, said her country was firmly committed to achieving the Millennium Development Goals and had effectively aligned the Goals with its National Economic Empowerment Development Strategy. That Strategy aimed to reduce poverty and promote pro-poor economic growth. The Government also set a seven-point agenda to address poverty, education and health. While Nigeria was on track to achieve some millennium targets, it still faced daunting challenges to achieve others, including the need for effective intergovernmental collaboration, reliable data and statistics from credible sources, and institutional and human resource capacity. The elimination of Nigeria’s debt had freed up $1 billion annually in debt-servicing costs. The money saved had been put into a Virtual Poverty Fund, used to finance such programmes as the Social Safety Net, a cash transfer scheme aimed to improve the lot of the poor.
Increased productivity in agriculture was necessary to achieve the first Millennium Goal, she continued. Current efforts were under way to improve irrigation, seed technology as well as access to inputs, markets and storage. However, challenges existed, due to the 20 per cent drop in food production at the end of the last harvest because of drought. Further, thanks to the universal basic education programme launched in 1999, Nigeria would most likely achieve universal primary education by 2015. Prospects were good for promoting gender equality in school enrolment. The Government was stepping up efforts to increase girls’ school enrolment. It had mandated that women fill 30 per cent of all public-sector posts. Nigeria was also making strides to combat HIV/AIDS. In 2002, Nigeria was the first sub-Saharan African country to provide anti-retroviral therapy to 10,000 adults and 5,000 children with its own resources, reaching 690,000 people in 2006. However, availability and affordability of such drugs was a problem. She urged development partners to scale up efforts to make treatment available, as well as to support Nigeria’s overall health-care sector.
ALEXIS BIZIMUNGU, Cabinet Chief for the Vice Minister in charge of Planning for Burundi, said Burundi was recovering from a long socio-economic crisis and, in an effort to fully recover, authorities were now firmly committed to achieving the Millennium Development Goals by 2015. However, progress had been “slow and modest”; poverty was on the rise, while external investment was on the decline. There had been modest successes, however, such as increased gender parity in the public and private sectors and an increase in school enrolment. The health sector continued to be of great concern and, without significant support from its development partners, Burundi would surely not attain health-care targets set out in the Millennium Goals. HIV/AIDS continued to ravage his country and, despite having set up a national office to deal with the problem, a large proportion of the HIV-infected population was still unable to receive proper treatment.
If current trends continued and the international community continued to delay financial support and debt cancellation for Burundi, it would not achieve any of the Millennium Goals by 2015, he said. Indeed, considering the poor performance of many developing countries in achieving the Millennium Goals, the international community should reassert their commitment to help countries achieve the Millennium Development Goals by moving beyond words and towards action. In particular, world leaders should make good on past commitments to help resolve the basic problem of financing for development, and should step up efforts to establish an integrated strategy for financing for development in the future.
CLAUDE HELLER ( Mexico ), speaking on behalf of the Rio Group, reiterated his determination and commitment to fight the conditions that caused poverty, social exclusion and inequality, as well as to create favourable conditions for socio-economic development to promote more just societies. Rio Group members were working to set up joint mechanisms to firmly and consistently implement ways to curb poverty and increase access to essential public services, such as education and health. It was also essential to achieve gender equality and women’s empowerment. The Millennium Development Goals were a useful guide to set minimum standards. He reaffirmed the Rio Group’s commitment to those Goals and he encouraged other Member States to do the same. Achieving poverty eradication and sustainable development was a complex national and international process supported by a broad and genuine commitment to solidarity among Governments worldwide. That process must result in effective, efficient international cooperation to finance the achievement of the Goals. It was alarming that many countries were not on track to achieve the millennium targets by 2015.
Development must be a shared responsibility, with all countries committed to international cooperation, he said. Developed countries must reach the target of earmarking 0.7 per cent of gross domestic product for official development assistance. Coordinated and effective action was also needed. He stressed the usefulness of, and the importance of, following the principles of the Paris Declaration. It was important to take into account the diverse situation of countries in the south and to keep a balanced perspective that guaranteed multilateral and bilateral support for all those that needed it to achieve their respective development goals. Support was necessary, particularly for middle-income countries, he said, stressing that more than 40 per cent of the world’s poor lived in those countries. Innovative financing for development was essential to complement existing traditional mechanisms and commitments.
ANDERS LIDÉN ( Sweden ), speaking on behalf of the Nordic countries, said the Millennium Development Goals could not be achieved without broader enjoyment of sexual and reproductive health and rights. Healthy women with the freedom to participate fully in society was a prerequisite for any country to achieving its full potential for sustainable economic and social development. The ability of women to control their own fertility and their access to reproductive health services were necessary to significantly reduce maternal and child mortality rates. Access for young men and women to contraceptives, comprehensive sex education and confidential reproductive health services were crucial to reduce adolescent birth rates. Sexual and reproductive health education and access to reproductive health services were the best guarantee for preventing HIV/AIDS. Everyone must have access to sexual and reproductive health and rights in order to achieve gender equality.
However, much remained to achieve those aims, he said. It was estimated that 70 per cent of the 1.3 billion people living in absolute poverty were women and girls. Two thirds of the world’s work was carried out by women and girls earning less than 5 per cent of total global income. Every year, 500,000 women died due to complications related to pregnancy or childbirth. More than 90 per cent of them were in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia. One quarter to one half of girls in developing countries become mothers before age 18. Sixty per cent of HIV-positive adults in sub-Saharan Africa were women and 75 per cent of newly infected youth were girls and young women aged 15 to 24. The Nordic countries had put sexual and reproductive health and rights at the centre of international development cooperation. He encouraged all partners to do the same and said he expected the United Nations to lead those efforts.
GERHARD PFANZELTER ( Austria ) said his country would spare no efforts to raise the quantity and quality of national aid for developing countries. The eradication of poverty was the key target of the Millennium Goals and determined, pro-poor policies, national strategies for poverty reduction, and political participation were important elements to overall success in that area. A reduction in poverty would help contribute to the maintenance of peace and security, as well. Unfortunately, climate change was exacerbating the challenge of poverty reduction. Many of the root causes of poverty were closely linked to environmental phenomena and efforts to fight climate change were, therefore, central to the fight against poverty and the attainment of sustainable development.
It was necessary to intensify international cooperation on energy issues, he said, as sustainable energy systems were a prerequisite for the attainment of the Millennium Goals. It was also important to address how climate change affected the security of individuals and vulnerable groups, such as women. Addressing gender-specific aspects of climate change was a requirement for successful climate change mitigation and adaptation strategies, but it could also have a positive effect on broader concerns of development and poverty reduction. “Only those who help quickly, help effectively,” he said. Developing a global partnership for development was essential and a test of that success would be the successful implementation of all the Millennium Goals.
AMI DIALLO ( Mali ), speaking on behalf of the landlocked developing countries, said progress on the Millennium Goals was uneven due to the disproportionate availability of global resources for development. For example, landlocked developing countries held 4 per cent of the world’s population, but accounted for only 0.3 per cent of gross domestic product worldwide. Without easy access to the benefits of globalization, landlocked developing countries encountered enormous obstacles to raising adequate funds for financing development and achieving the Millennium Development Goals. As a result, more than two thirds of their populations lived on less than $2 a day and half of school-age children were unable to attend school.
The international community should, therefore, pay special attention to the needs of landlocked developing countries, she continued. In particular, it should focus support for the Almaty agenda, which was scheduled to go through a midterm review in October 2008. Compounding the already difficult situation of landlocked developing countries was the problem of climate change, which was also addressed positively in the Almaty programme. In conclusion, she reiterated the need for support for the Almaty agenda and for all efforts to help developing countries achieve the Millennium Development Goals by 2015.
FEKITAMOELOA ‘UTOIKAMANU ( Tonga ) on behalf of the Pacific small island developing States, said those States had made some notable progress in specific areas towards achieving the Millennium Development Goals. However, at current trends, most of those States faced challenges to achieving all the Millennium Development Goals by 2015. While embracing the primary responsibility for their development, it was also recognized that the States faced common constraints, which made their economies more vulnerable, due to the very nature of their size, remoteness from markets, limited human resource capacity and vulnerability to natural catastrophes and climate change. Those challenges were exacerbated where there had been conflict or civil/political instability. Governance challenges, the impact of global externalities such as rising oil and food prices, domestic migration and labour mobility had also limited the ability of Pacific Governments to implement the necessary policy initiatives to realize significant Millennium Development Goal gains.
The region’s leaders recognized that those challenges required the pooling of scarce regional resources of governance and the aligning of policies to strengthen national capacities, he continued. Regional integration and cooperation, therefore, played a vital supporting role in the region. The challenges for the Pacific small island developing States to get back on track to achieve the Millennium Development Goals by 2015 were daunting, but not impossible to overcome with an increased level of support from the international community to address the plethora of issues. Those included the need to accelerate economic growth rates to more sustainable levels, strengthen governance systems and address the HIV/AIDS pandemic more effectively. It was also necessary to address education and health challenges, vulnerabilities related to climate change and natural disasters, as well as cross-cutting issues like gender equality and empowerment of women. Other important steps to reach the Millennium Development Goals in the Pacific included addressing the special needs of the small island developing States, including access to technology, affordable and available medicines and jobs for their growing populations, particularly the young.
ILEKA ATOKI ( Democratic Republic of Congo ), speaking on behalf of the African Group, said it was disappointing that African countries, in particular the countries of sub-Saharan Africa, were not on track to achieve any of the Millennium Development Goals. “Even the best governed countries on the continent have not been able to make sufficient progress,” he said. Time was running out to make much needed investments, and past commitments made by world leaders should be immediately fulfilled and translated into practical plans with systematic follow-through. African countries had a vision of a peaceful and prosperous Africa, internally driven and able to take its rightful place in the global community. Education was key to turning that dream into a reality and, though African countries had made some progress towards the Goal of universal primary school enrolment, they still had a long way to go.
HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria were still pervasive diseases in Africa and more needed to be achieved in those areas, as well, he added. Child mortality rates were still too high and reducing maternal mortality rates was proving complex and challenging, due to the limited availability of information, health care workers and health services. Improving reproductive and maternal health would require quality family planning and a whole range of sexual and reproductive health care that was not currently accessible. Though the World Health Organization ( WHO ) had responded positively to concerns about human resource challenges in the health care sectors of developing countries, the “brain drain” of educated workers to developed countries was still very high. In closing, he said that global partnerships for development should be strengthened to help developing countries attain the Millennium Development Goals, since it was clear that, currently, African countries were not on track.
MUNIR AKRAM ( Pakistan ) said that, while the first seven Millennium Development Goals were very important to developing countries, they all hinged on achieving Goal 8: creating a global partnership for development. While developing countries had done their part in improving governance and creating the requisite macro-environments, unfortunately, the major developed countries had not demonstrated similar alacrity in their efforts to create, or enable the creation of, the partnerships that would support those efforts. Developing financing was often tied to conditionalities and the flow of foreign direct investment was concentrated in a few dynamic development markets, while the wider developing world was starved of investment flows.
He said the most effective cooperation was that which was based on the national needs of concerned countries. The resulting partnership initiatives must be managed and driven by country-level agencies and programmes. The international community had long been seeking the appropriate tool to ensure comprehensive follow-up to the implementation of the Millennium Development Goals. The best way to come up with such a mechanism was to put to better use the various high-level segments of the Economic and Social Council, especially the newly launched Development Cooperation Forum.
He went on to propose that all relevant United Nations agencies and international financial institutions come together to develop a mechanism to monitor the long called for global development partnership. That initiative should monitor financing, trade and technology areas. Policy decisions taken in each of those areas should be reflected in a matrix prepared by the Department of Economic and Social Affairs and the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development ( UNCTAD ) to help the international community measure the achievement of specific partnership goals. Finally he stressed that it was important not to lose sight of the other challenges developing countries faced, including rising commodity prices, unequal trade regimes and ongoing financial crises in the world’s largest industrialized economies.
RAYMOND O. WOLFE ( Jamaica ) supported the position of the Group of 77 and China, and said that urgent action was required to fully achieve the Millennium Development Goals. There was consensus in the room that the Goals constituted an integral part of the United Nations development agenda dating back to the 1960s. At the midpoint to the achievement of the Goals, reports pointed to mixed progress among the regions in reaching some of them. Significant challenges remained in their implementation. Full and effective implementation of the Millennium Development Goals by 2015 remained a national priority for his Government and had been incorporated at various levels into its national development strategies. Successes had been recorded in many areas, including poverty eradication, primary school enrolment, life expectancy and eradication of communicable diseases.
While underscoring the primary responsibility of national Governments for their own development, his delegation believed that success by developing countries hinged largely on assistance received from developed countries, he said. Jamaica encouraged developed partners to fulfil their longstanding commitments to achieve the official development assistance target of 0.7 per cent of gross national income by 2015. Despite numerous pledges made, official development assistance had declined in the last three years. The importance of Millennium Development Goal 8 -- a global partnership for development -- must be emphasized. Among the main challenges that impeded developing countries’ progress, he highlighted climate change. It was an open secret that, while industrialized nations were the primary contributors to climate change, the developing world paid the price. The global trade regime should be made more conducive to progress in all developing countries. He noted with great concern the stalemate in the negotiations in the Doha Development Round since 2001. “If our developed partners are truly committed to the development dimensions of the Doha Round, an early and successful conclusion of the negotiations is, indeed, vital,” he said. The clock was ticking as the world approached the 2015 benchmark. Additional decisive action was needed now if the Goals were to be accomplished.
HILARIO DAVIDE, JR. ( Philippines ) said his country gave top priority to achieving the Millennium Development Goals. The policies and strategies in its Medium-Term Philippine Development Plan of 2004 to 2010 were designed to pursue and achieve the Millennium Development Goals. Key players in the country had performed significant roles to help realize them. The Department of Budget and Management had issued policy guidelines and procedures in the preparation of national and local budget proposals emphasizing the importance of funding programmes, projects and activities in support of the Millennium Development Goals. The House of Representatives of the Congress had formulated a Millennium Development Goals legislative agenda prioritizing legislative measures attuned and responsive to early realization of the Goals. At the same time, the Department of Interior and local governments had issued a guide to local government units, so they could better incorporate the Millennium Development Goals in their local development planning and budgeting.
Midway towards 2015, the Philippines had made considerable strides in meeting most of the Goals, he went on. Using the tracking methodology, the country was likely to meet the targets on poverty reduction; nutrition; reducing child mortality; combating HIV and AIDS, malaria and other diseases; and access to safe drinking water. The correct policy, plans and programmes were in place to combat HIV/AIDS, malaria and other major diseases. Given appropriate support from the Global Fund for AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, the country would be able to attain that Millennium Development Goal target. The Philippines, however, had to accelerate efforts to meet the off-track Millennium Development Goal targets on access to primary education, reduction in maternal mortality and access to reproductive health. On primary education, the country was faced with problems concerning the huge amount of resources needed to construct classrooms, improve and print textbooks, and to train and hire qualified teachers. The Philippines reiterated support for the proposal for wider debt-for-equity arrangements to fund Millennium Development Goals-related programmes and projects. The United Nations needed to spearhead an international campaign to change the concept of debt sustainability from “capacity to pay” to “level of debt”, which allowed developing countries like the Philippines to achieve the Goals without increasing debt and where financing the Goals was not obstructed by debt service burdens.
FRANCIS K. BUTAGIRA ( Uganda ) said that, although his country’s 1997 poverty eradication plan predated the Millennium Development Goals, it contained similar targets. The plan had guided the Government’s policy and implementation of programmes through sector-wide approaches and a decentralized system of governance. All internationally agreed development goals, including the Millennium Development Goals, had been carefully integrated into it. The country’s universal primary education plan had effectively doubled primary school enrolment, and currently 7.6 million children were enrolled, 50 per cent of them girls. The remaining challenges included improvement of the quality of education. Uganda was now pursuing universal secondary education. Gender equality, empowerment of women and HIV/AIDS were among cross-cutting issues in the country’s poverty eradication plan. The prevalence rate of HIV/AIDS had been reduced from about 20 per cent in 1996 to the current rate of 6.4 per cent. The implementation of the Goal of ensuring access to safe drinking water and sanitation was at 50 per cent and 60 per cent for rural and urban areas, respectively.
Turning to “the bad news”, she said Uganda was off-track on Goals 4 and 5, which were unlikely to be met by 2015. Getting back on track required redoubling of national efforts. Even more crucial was effective international aid in support of nationally owned strategies. Among other factors that hindered Uganda’s realization of the Millennium Development Goals, she mentioned food import surges as a result of lowering tariffs; the country’s heavy dependence on primary commodities; dependence on oil as a source of energy; a heavy external debt burden; and a declining level of official development assistance. Further aid utilization must be nationally determined and oriented towards budget support, rather than project-focused. The United Nations had a key role to play in promoting a global partnership for development.
NIRUPAM SEN ( India ), describing the Millennium Goals as a quantifiable measure of human dignity and international commitment to sustainable development, said Goal 8, on the international partnership for development, was critical. Concerned that efforts were under way to redefine the Millennium Development Goal framework by adding or revising targets and indicators, India strongly opposed the selective inclusion of commitments made at the 2005 World Summit and attempts to include that meeting’s outcome among the Millennium targets. Attempts to transfer targets from Goal 8 to Goal 1 were also troubling. Tinkering with the Millennium Development Goal process, which had practically become international customary law, would only undermine its legitimacy.
Reaching the Goals would require not tampering with the process, but restructuring international trade rules, global financing mechanisms, and partnership initiatives, he continued. Such a refocusing of effort -– “to make those words flesh” –- would require, among other things, the United Nations to harness its awesome convening power, and the international community to combine Millennium Goal initiatives with efforts to address the root causes of hunger and poverty. “We can never make poverty history unless we understand the history of poverty,” he said, stressing that the international community must assist the development efforts of developing countries by creating a conducive global environment.
FRANCES LISSON ( Australia ) said the Millennium Development Goals had become a unifying force for international action to halve extreme poverty. Australia had promised to provide $A3.2 billion in aid to reduce poverty and achieve sustainable development over the period 2007–2008. Though many donor countries had failed to live up to similar promises, she reassured Member States that the Australian Government had taken the necessary steps to ensure that targets would be reached. Indeed, increasing amounts of official development assistance had been set aside in Australia’s national budget through 2011. Those funds would translate into greater investment in aid in key sectors, such as health, education, sanitation and the environment.
Australia was particularly focused on helping developing countries build well-functioning education systems and to improve their health care systems, she continued. However, the need for environmental sustainability in achieving those goals could not be overlooked. Although there had been good progress on improving access to safe drinking water, it was still far behind acceptable levels. The United Nations had an important role to play in delivering development assistance and supporting implementation of national development plans. For its part, Australia was committed to international efforts to achieve the Millennium Development Goals, including the 0.7 per cent target for official development assistance and the full engagement in the partnerships needed to attain those Goals.
KAIRE MUNIONGANDA MBUENDE ( Namibia ) said his country had made significant progress towards the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals by 2015, and had met a significant number of targets ahead of time. By the same token, meeting other targets remained a daunting task. The country’s effort to meet the Millennium Development Goals formed an integral part of a national process of strengthening policies and mobilizing domestic and external resources towards the long-term development plan, “Vi
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