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GO
BETWEEN - NO 105 - October - November - December 2004 -
Calendar
2005 in PDF
UN UPDATE
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WIPO
Adopts Development Agenda
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The General Assembly of the World Intellectual Property Organization
(WIPO) met for its 31st session in Geneva from 27 September-5 October,
bringing together its 181 member states to review WIPOs activities
of the past year and to agree on its agenda for the next year. It
concluded by adopting a proposal tabled by developing countries
entitled Proposal for Establishing a Development Agenda for the
World Intellectual Property Organisation, which aims to help ensure
effective technology transfer to developing countries and a proper
balance in intellectual property norms between the respective interests
of producers and users of technical knowledge, among other things.
It will also integrate in a more systematic manner the development
dimension in all of WIPOs work.
During its meetings, the WIPO General Assembly debated and reviewed
a number of issues, including: audiovisual performers rights; the
protection of broadcasting organizations to update international
intellectual property standards for broadcasting in the information
age; and the convening of a Diplomatic Conference for the Adoption
of a Revised Trademark Law Treaty (TLT) to update the existing treaty
(to be held in March 2006), among others.
On 5 October, the General Assembly adopted a proposal presented
by Brazil and Argentina and co-sponsored by Bolivia, Cuba, the Dominican
Republic, Ecuador, Iran, Kenya, Sierra Leone, South Africa, Tanzania
and Venezuela. The core concept of the proposal is the integration
of a development dimension into WIPO's activities (intellectual
property norm-setting, transfer of technology and technical cooperation).
Specifically, the proposal suggests that the upcoming General Assembly
consider the following actions:
- adoption of a high-level declaration on Intellectual Property
(IP) and development, addressing the development concerns that have
been raised by WIPO Members States and the international community
at large;
- an amendment to the WIPO Convention in order to explicitly incorporate
the development dimension into the organizations objectives
and functions;
- inclusion of provisions on transfer of technology, anticompetitive
practices and safeguarding the public interest flexibilities into
treaties under negotiation;
- the establishment of a multi-year WIPO programme for technical
cooperation with the aim of strengthening national intellectual
property offices so that they can become an acting element in national
development policies;
- the creation of a Standing Committee on IP and Transfer of Technology,
which would consider, among other things, the negotiation of an
Agreement on Transfer of Technology to developing and least developed
countries (LDCs);
n the organization of a joint WIPO, World Trade Organization (WTO),
and United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD)
international seminar on intellectual property and development;
- the adoption of measures to ensure the wide participation of civil
society in WIPO activities and a change of WIPOs terminology
with regard to NGOs; and
- the establishment of a Working Group for a further discussion
on the implementation of the Development Agenda and work programmes
for WIPO.
In his closing remarks, the General Assembly Chair, Ambassador
Bernard Kessedjian (France), welcomed the spirit of cooperation
that he said had characterized the talks, in particular the talks
to enhance the development dimension in WIPOs work, suggesting
that it had added renewed impetus to the future work of the organization.
Consumers International (CI) welcomed the adoption of the WIPO
Development Agenda, which it defined as a breakthrough move.
Anna Fielder, Director of the CIs Office for Developed and
Transitional Economies, said, The WIPO decision to move on
this resolution is good for creators and consumers alike. We particularly
welcome the willingness to look at increasing access to knowledge
and technology in developing countries. James Love of the
Consumer Project on Technology said WIPOs adoption of the
development agenda represented a change in culture and direction
for WIPO. We are moving forward and WIPO will never be the same.
Contact: Samar Shamoon, Head, Media Relations and Public Affairs
Section, WIPO, 34 chemin des Colombettes, CH-1211 Geneva 20, Switzerland,
telephone +41-22/338 8161, fax +41-22/733 5428, e-mail <publicinf@wipo.int>,
website (www.wipo.int).
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Kyoto
Protocol To Enter Into Force
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On 18 November UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan received the Russian
Federations instrument of ratification of the Kyoto Protocol,
thus triggering the 90-day countdown to the entry into force of
the climate change agreement. This is a historic step forward
in the worlds efforts to combat a truly global threat,
Mr. Annan said.
The Protocol will become legally binding on its 128 Parties on
16 February 2005, at which time 30 industrialized countries will
be legally bound to reduce and limit their emissions of six greenhouse
gases linked to global warming. The formal handover of the accession
papers on ratification follows a 27 October decision by the Russian
Federal Council to ratify the Convention and the 4 November signing
of the bill by Russian President Vladimir Putin.
The fight against climate change has been under starters
orders for far too long. But it is finally out of the blocks and
running as a result of this very welcome decision to ratify by the
Russian Parliament, said Klaus Toepfer, Executive Director
of the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP).
The winning tape, in other words the goal of stabilizing
the climate and securing the stability of the planet, is however
a long way off and we must now re-double efforts to deliver the
even deeper cuts in emissions needed, he stressed.
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S-G Pays Tribute
to Yasser Arafat
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On 11 November, UN Secretary-General
Kofi Annan spoke before the General Assembly, paying tribute to President
Yasser Arafat shortly after his death.
For nearly four decades, Yasser Arafat expressed and symbolized
in his person the national aspirations of the Palestinian people.
He was one of those few leaders who was instantly recognizable by
people in any walk of life, all around the world.
President Arafat will always be remembered for having led
the Palestinians, in 1988, to accept the principle of peaceful coexistence
between Israel and a future Palestinian State. By signing the Oslo
accords in 1993, he took a giant step towards the realization of
this vision.
It is tragic that he did not live to see it fulfilled. Now
that he has gone, both Israelis and Palestinians, and the friends
of both peoples throughout the world, must make even greater efforts
to bring about the peaceful realization of the Palestinian right
of self-determination.
Thirty years ago this week, Yasser Arafat stood in this chamber,
when he became the first representative of a non-governmental organization
to speak to a plenary session of the General Assembly. One year
later, the General Assembly adopted resolution 3237, conferring
on the PLO the status of Observer in the Assembly and in other international
conferences held under United Nations auspices.
But the relationship between the United Nations and the Palestinian
people is far deeper and broader, and dates back much longer, than
that. For 55 years, the United Nations Relief and Works Agency has
provided humanitarian assistance, health care, housing and education
to Palestinians. Today, there are a total of 19 UN agencies and
bodies lending their assistance to the Palestinian people. We must
and will continue that work, for as long as the Palestinian people
need our help.
Together with our partners, we will also continue our efforts
to achieve the full implementation of the Road Map, as endorsed
by the Security Council in its resolution 1515. Our goal is the
realization of a just, lasting and comprehensive peace in the Middle
East, based on Security Council resolutions 242, 338 and 1397. This
includes as its centrepiece the establishment of a sovereign, democratic,
viable and contiguous Palestinian State, living side by side in
peace with a secure Israel.
Though President Arafat did not live to see the attainment
of these goals, the world will continue to strive towards them,
the Secretary-General concluded.
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International
Year of Microcredit |
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On 18 November the United Nations launched the International Year
of Microcredit in an effort to build support for making financial
services more accessible to poor and low-income people. It will
aim to raise public awareness about microcredit and microfinance,
and promote innovative partnerships among governments, donors, international
organizations, NGOs, the private sector, academia and microfinance
clients.
At opening celebrations at UN headquarters in New York, experts
addressed the challenge of expanding the reach of microfinance by
identifying best practices and the hurdles to wider availability.
One key need is to collect and analyse hard data on the state of
microfinance: its availability by region, client profiles, and types
and quantities of services offered.
The world has set an ambitious course to meet the Millennium
Development Goal (MDG) of cutting in half, by 2015, the proportion
of people living on less than one dollar a day. Microfinance is
a powerful tool to help us get there, said Mark Malloch Brown,
Administrator of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP).
More than one billion people90% of the worlds self-employed
poorlack access to basic financial services, depriving them
of the means to improve their incomes, secure their existence, and
cope with emergencies. The International Fund for Agricultural Development
(IFAD) is calling for global efforts to further accelerate the growth
of microfinance in order to enable millions of people around the
world with little income or collateral to investespecially
womento start up businesses, save, and support their families
education and welfare. Poor people are becoming part of the
global financial market and want to access a greater range of financial
services and products. To meet their needs, we have to help microfinance
move closer towards the formal financial system, Lennart Båge,
President of IFAD, said.
Over the last five years the microfinance sector has grown at an
average rate of 25%-30%. Sixty-three of the worlds top microfinance
institutions (MFIs) had an average rate of return of about 2.5%
of total assets, comparing favourably with returns in the commercial
banking sector. Banks can no longer view credit to the poor as a
bad risk, IFAD says. In countries as diverse as Bangladesh, Benin
and the Dominican Republic, repayment rates are as high as 97%.
Since 1978, IFAD has worked to help rural people overcome poverty,
and it was one of the first agencies to support the Grameen Bank,
pioneer of the microcredit concept, which now serves 2.4 million
borrowers in Bangladesh. IFAD is pushing hard for greater
diversity in financial services for the poor in rural areas and
nowadays we are working with an amazing array of institutional partnerscommercial,
cooperative and village banks; post offices; and even marketing,
insurance and ICT companies to develop and improve the long-term
prospects of MFIs, Gary Howe, IFADs Chief Development
Strategist, said.
The General Assembly has designated the United Nations Capital
Development Fund (UNCDF) and the United Nations Department of Economic
and Social Affairs as focal points to coordinate UN activities for
the International Year.
Contact: Emily Krasnor, Year of Microcredit 2005, UNCDF, Two
UN Plaza, 26th Floor, New York NY 10017, USA, telephone +1-212/906
6308, fax +1-212/906 6479, e-mail <emily.krasnor@undp.org>,
website (www.uncdf.org/english/microfinance).
Sappho Haralambous, IFAD, 107 via del Serafico, 00142 Rome,
Italy, telephone +39-06/5459 2238, fax +39-06/5459 2034, e-mail
<ifad@ifad.org>, website (www.ifad.org).
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Millennium
Summit +5 |
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The General Assembly has generally
agreed on how the Millennium Summit+5 will take place. Last May, the
GA decided to hold in New York in 2005 a ministerial level meeting
to review the implementation of the Millennium Declaration and the
integrated follow-up to other major UN conferences and summits. On
22 November, the Assembly decided the ministerial meeting would be
held from 14-16 September 2005, including three days of plenary debate,
made up of two meetings per day and four roundtable discussions. |
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FAO
Council Adopts Right to Food Guidelines |
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On 24 November, the Council,
the executive governing body of the UN Food and Agriculture Organization
(FAO), adopted voluntary guidelines that would support the progressive
realization of the right to adequate food in the context of national
food security.
The adoption of the Right to Food Guidelines comes two months after
the FAO Committee on World Food Security endorsed them after over
a year and a half of negotiations (see Go Between 104). According
to FAO, the guidelines were conceived to provide practical
guidance to help countries implement their obligations relating
to the right to adequate food, which in turn should improve the
chances of reaching the hunger reduction goals set by the 1996 World
Food Summit and the United Nations Millennium Assembly. Both agreed
to cut the number of hungry people in the world by half by 2015.
The voluntary guidelines take into account a wide range of human
rights principles, including equality and non-discrimination, participation
and inclusion, accountability and the rule of law, as well as the
principle that all human rights are universal, indivisible, interrelated
and interdependent.
The guidelines are a human rights-based tool addressed to
all States to help implement good practices in food security policies.
They cover the full range of actions that need to be taken at the
national level to construct an enabling environment for people to
feed themselves in dignity and to establish appropriate safety nets
for those who cannot. This landmark event signifies universal acceptance
of what the right to food really means, said Hartwig de Haen,
Assistant Director-General of FAOs Economic and Social Department.
Now we face the challenge of putting these guidelines into
everyday practice in a way that will bring an end to the injustice
of hunger. The guidelines provide us with a new instrument to better
define the obligation of the State and to address the needs of the
hungry and malnourished and we should use them to empower the poor
and hungry to claim their rights, Giuliano Pucci, FAO Legal
Counsel, stressed. More information is available online (www.fao.org/docrep/meeting/008/
J3345e/j3345e01.htm).
Contact: John Riddle, Information Officer, FAO, Viale delle
Terme di Caracalla, I-00100 Rome, Italy, telephone +39-06/5705 3259,
fax +39-06/5705 3699, e-mail <john.riddle@fao.org>, website
(www.fao.org).
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ILO
and UNHCR Strengthen Cooperation |
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The heads of the International
Labour Organization (ILO) and the United Nations High Commissioner
for Refugees (UNHCR) have announced that they will strengthen their
cooperation on reducing poverty for refugees, returnees and internally
displaced persons (IDPs) by implementing programmes dealing with skills
and enterprise development, microfinance and social protection.
Accumulated experience has demonstrated the effectiveness
of employment-oriented strategies for promoting sustainable livelihoods
in bridging relief and development, ILO Director-General Juan
Somavía and High Commissioner for Refugees Ruud Lubbers said
in a joint statement at the ILO Governing Councils 291st session
held in Geneva from 4-19 November.
Acknowledging that refugees and returnees can work on socio-economic
development either in their host countries or in their countries
of origin, the partnership would also contribute to achieving the
Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) of reducing extreme poverty.
With financial support from Italy, a joint ILO-UNHCR global programme
for the socio-economic integration of refugees, returnees and internally
displaced persons was launched at the end of 2003. The programme
focuses on strategies that bring together employment-intensive reconstruction,
enterprise development, microfinance, skills development, womens
economic empowerment, social protection, local economic development
and capacity building.
Projects are currently being undertaken in Angola, Eritrea, Mozambique,
Serbia and Montenegro, Somalia, Southern Sudan and Uganda, and there
are plans to deploy experts to Benin, the Democratic Republic of
Congo, Ghana and Northern Caucasus in the near future.
Contact: InFocus Programme on Crisis Response and Reconstruction,
ILO, 4 route des Morillons, 1211 Geneva 22, Switzerland, e-mail<
ifpcrisis@ilo.org>, website (www.ilo.org).
Reintegration and Local Settlement Section, Division of Operational
Support, UNHCR, Case Postale 2500, CH-1211 Geneva 2 Dépôt,
Switzerland, telephone +41-22/739 8111, e-mail <HQTS02@unhcr.ch>,
website (www.unhcr.ch).
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Intl
Day for the Eradication of Poverty |
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To mark the International
Day for the Eradication of Poverty, the United Nations Department
of Economic and Social Affairs, the International Movement ATD Fourth
World, the UN Department of Public Information and the NGO Sub-Committee
for the Eradication of Poverty jointly hosted, on 14 October, a ceremony
in honour of the victims of extreme poverty followed by a panel discussion.
In his message observing the International Day, UN Secretary-General
Kofi Annan said that while it was important to draw a solid statistical
picture of the gains and shortfalls in the fight against poverty,
all concerned should remember that poverty was not about numbers
but individuals: young people at work and out of school, children
orphaned by AIDS and other preventable diseases, mothers who die
in childbirth, communities affected by environmental degradation.
Mr. Annan emphasized that it was well within the power of Member
States and others concerned to overcome these and other terrible
manifestations of poverty and underdevelopment.
The ceremony in honour of the victims of extreme poverty included
testimonies from children and adults living in poverty as well as
performances by the Peace of Heart Choir. The panel discussion that
followed drew attention to the issue of How Poverty Separates
Parents and Children, a theme taken from a recent study published
by ATD Fourth World.
In his opening statement, Under-Secretary-General for Economic
and Social Affairs José Antonio Ocampo said the centrality
of the family in society often had escaped the attention of policymakers
and they had shown insufficient regard for the contributions families
make to the wellbeing of their members. Mr. Ocampo stressed that
the UN Department of Social and Economic Affairs (DESA) was now
more actively promoting the integration of a family perspective
into policy making.
Summarizing its study, ATD Fourth World underscored that in the
face of poverty, parents could show unstinting resilience and courage
on behalf of their children, making enormous efforts to safeguard
relationships and keep the family together. The report is available
online (www.atd-quartmonde.org/accueil-uk.html).
Established by General Assembly resolution 47/196 in 1993, the
International Day has been observed every year since to promote
awareness of the need to eradicate poverty. More recently, the Day
has served to remind people that a continued effort is vital to
achieve the Millennium Development Goal of halving the number of
people living in poverty by 2015.
Contact: United Nations Department of Public Information, Room
S-1070 L, New York NY 10017, USA, telephone +1-212-963-2744, e-mail
<mediainfo@un.org>.
Fourth World Movement/USA, 7600 Willow Hill Drive, Landover
MD 20785, USA, telephone +1-301/336 9489, fax +1-301/336 0092, e-mail
<nationalcenter@4thworldmovement.org>, website (www.4thworldmovement.org).
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International
Day for Children: 20 November |
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20 November is celebrated as
the International Day for Children, and this year it marked the 15th
anniversary of the adoption of the Convention on the Rights of the
Child (CRC). According to the United Nations Childrens Fund
(UNICEF) Executive Director, Carol Bellamy, despite major advancements
for children that include the creation of new laws in many countries,
the rights of millions of children remain forgotten or ignored.
The enactment of new laws set in motion by the Convention
is a positive step that is critical to protecting the rights of
children, but legal reform must be pursued at the same time as social
policies that address the challenges facing children right now,
Ms. Bellamy said. Too many children are growing up without
basic health care, education and protection from abuse and exploitation.
Adopted in 1989 and ratified by every country in the world except
two, the CRC is the most widely accepted international human rights
treaty in history. It spells out the basic human rights that children
everywhere have: the right to survival; to develop to the fullest;
to protection from harm, abuse and exploitation; and to participate
fully in family, cultural and social life. A recent review by UNICEF
of 62 countries that have strived to implement the CRC shows that
more than half the countries studied have incorporated the CRC into
domestic law; nearly a third of the countries have incorporated
important provisions on the rights of the child into their constitutions;
and nearly half the countries have adopted codes or comprehensive
laws on children.
In addition, two optional protocols anchored on the CRC have been
approved since: one on the involvement of children in armed conflict;
and the second on the sale of children, child prostitution and child
pornography (see NGLS Roundup 92). There has been widespread ratification
of both, and their implementation is gaining momentum, Ms. Bellamy
noted.
The survey also found that while high-level political commitment
has been essential to the development of new laws protecting childrens
rights, social change has been sustained only when that commitment
has been matched by effective law enforcement, allocation of adequate
resources and the engagement of all levels of society.
Only when governments are dedicated to developing and implementing
laws to protect children and work in partnership with all sectors
of society will we have the true culture of human rights for children
that the CRC envisions, Ms. Bellamy said.
If we are truly to make a difference in childrens lives,
and have a chance at achieving the social and economic goals of
the world community, we must make the rights of these marginalized
and forgotten children our highest priority. The rights to education,
health care and a safe and loving environment in which to thrive
must never be theoretical. They must be a reality for all children,
Ms. Bellamy stressed.
Contact: Kimberly Gamble-Payne, Deputy Director, Office for
Public Partnerships, UNICEF, 3 UN Plaza, New York NY 10017, USA,
telephone +1-212/824 6648, fax +1-212/303 7992, e-mail <kgamblepayne@unicef.org>,
website (www.unicef.org).
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UNICEF:
Child Survival Report Card |
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Almost 100 countries are behind
schedule in reaching the globally agreed goal to reduce the rate of
child deaths by two-thirds by 2015, according to a study by the United
Nations Childrens Fund (UNICEF), entitled Progress for Children:
A Child Survival Report Card. If current trends continue, the average
death rate of children under the age of five will have fallen worldwide
by only a quarter in the 25 years to 2015far short of the target
set in the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).
While much of the industrialized world, the Middle East, North Africa,
Latin America, the Caribbean, East Asia and the Pacific is on target
to achieve the MDG, many nations in sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia,
and Central and Eastern Europe lag far behind.
According to UNICEF Executive Director Carol Bellamy, there are
11 million preventable child deaths every year as far too many children
still do not have access to basic services, such as health care,
sanitation and clean water. It is incredible that in an age
of technological and medical marvels, child survival is so tenuous
in so many places, especially for the poor and marginalized. We
can do better than this, she said.
Inadequate birthing conditions are responsible for the most preventable
deaths: without skilled attendants during delivery or help for the
mother, many babies fall victim almost immediately to infectious
and parasitic diseases such as diarrhoea, malaria and measles. Acute
respiratory infections, malnutrition and HIV/AIDS are among the
biggest causes.
The world has the tools to improve child survival, if only
it would use them, Ms. Bellamy stressed. She called for greater
spending on vaccines, micro-nutrient supplements and insecticide-treated
mosquito nets, which dont cost much, and would save
millions of children.
The study highlights the vast discrepancy in child mortality rates
between rich and poor States. One out of every six children in sub-Saharan
Africa die before they reach the age of five, compared to one in
every 143 in the industrialized world.
Sierra Leone, despite a small improvement, retains the worst rates
on the planet. In 2002 there were 284 deaths for every 1,000 births.
The most successful nation is Sweden, which has cut its child mortality
rate to three deaths per 1,000 births.
Overall, 90 countriesincluding 53 in the developing worldare
on target to achieve the MDG, but another 98 developing nations
trail behind. In 11 States, the rates have actually worsened since
1990, partly because of HIV/AIDS. Those countries are Botswana,
Cambodia, Cameroon, Côte d'Ivoire, Iraq, Kazakhstan, Kenya,
South Africa, Swaziland, Uzbekistan and Zimbabwe.
The report is available online (www.unicef.org/media/files/pfc_english.pdf).
Contact: Kimberly Gamble-Payne, Deputy Director, Office for
Public Partnerships, UNICEF, 3 UN Plaza, New York NY 10017, USA,
telephone +1-212/824 6648, fax +1-212/303 7992, e-mail <kgamblepayne@unicef.org>,
website (www.unicef.org).
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First
Committee Concludes 2004 Session |
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Concluding its third session
on 5 November, the First Committee (Disarmament and International
Security) approved without a vote a draft resolution (document A/C.1/59/L.60)
that would have the General Assembly invite Member States to take
steps towards improving the effectiveness of the Committees
methods of work.
The steps would include: submitting draft resolutions in a more
concise, focused and action-oriented manner; considering the biennialization
or triennialization of agenda items; continuing to hold interactive
debates; and merging texts that were similar in substance.
In his closing remarks, Committee Chairman Luis Alfonso De Alba
(Mexico) said delegations must approach their work with a readiness
to commit themselves to attaining common goals. Declaring that challenges
to international peace and security were indeed global, he said
it was impossible for countries to succeed in protecting themselves
if they worked alone. He added that, whereas the Committee had made
progress in improving its working methods, such reform must not
be seen as an end in itself. After all, substantive issues also
needed to be tackled, he urged.
Mohamed Yusoff Zain (Malaysia) on behalf of the Non-Aligned Movement
(NAM) pointed out that 2004 had been a disappointing year
in the field of multilateral disarmament. Looking ahead to the Nairobi
Summit on the Ottawa Convention in late November and the Biological
Weapons Convention Review Conference in December, as well as the
Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) Review
Conference in May 2005, he suggested those meetings would provide
the much-needed impetus to move the global disarmament agenda forward.
The Secretary-General, in his most recent report on the work of
the Organization (A/59/1), said the clandestine network and violations
of non-proliferation commitmentsalong with the slow pace of
disarmament and the threat of terrorismjeopardize international
peace and security and may increase the risk of new instances of
unilateral or pre-emptive use of force. In light of those
dangers, he told the General Assembly on 21 September that it
is by strengthening and implementing disarmament treaties, including
their verification provisions, that we can best defend ourselves
against the proliferationand potential useof weapons
of mass destruction.
More information on the First Committee is available online (www.un.org/ga/59/first/press.shtml).
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Eliminating
Violence Against Women
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The International Day for the
Elimination of Violence Against Women was observed on 25 November
with commemorative eventsincluding workshops, concerts, educational
fairs, art exhibitions and academic debatestaking place worldwide.
On 17 November, the United Nations Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM)
organized a special event at UN headquarters in New York, and the
UN Department of Informations (DPI) NGO section held a briefing
on 18 November. Below are extracts from UN Secretary-General Kofi
Annans message commemorating the day.
Violence against women is global in reach, and takes place
in all societies and cultures, affecting women no matter what their
race, ethnicity, social origin, property, birth or other status
may be.
Gender-based violence is particularly pervasive in situations
of armed conflict, when women and girls become victims of rape and
other forms of sexual abuse, and are vulnerable to trafficking.
Last May, in an important step towards ending the impunity with
which such crimes are committed, the Trial Chamber of the Special
Court for Sierra Leone approved a motion to add a new count of forced
marriage to indictments against six defendants. Thus, for
the first time, forced marriage will be prosecuted as a crime against
humanity.
Violence against women is a challenge in itself, but comes
with an added deadly dimension: the risk of HIV infection. Sexual
violence increases womens vulnerability to the virus. All
too frequently, the threat of violence forces women to have unprotected
sex.
The Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against
Women, the human rights treaty body that monitors implementation
of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination
against Women, continues to play a dynamic role in ensuring that
this issue is a high priority for the international community. The
Optional Protocol to the Convention gives women and groups of women
the right to petition, and has the potential to become a highly
effective tool for addressing gender-based violence and other violations
of womens human rights, Mr. Annan stressed.
On 17 November, a UNIFEM event, entitled Building partnerships
to end violence against women, highlighted the critical role
of global partnerships between governments, the UN system, womens
networks, civil society and the private sector to address the issue.
It also sought to remind the international community that their
commitment and action to end gender-based violence must be intensified
to meet future challenges.
On 18 November, DPIs NGO section held a briefing on the theme
of Women, Violence and HIV/AIDS. Among the key points
raised at the briefing was the issue of gender equality in dealing
with HIV/AIDS. Participants argued that without putting an end to
domestic violence, gender equality in the fight against HIV/AIDS
would be undermined. Speakers also drew attention to the loss of
womens rights in times of conflict and how this made them
targets of acts of sexual violence, molestation and rape. It was
noted that these sex crimes often lead to an increase in HIV/AIDS
cases among women, which, in turn, affects the way these women contribute
to the livelihood of their communities.
Contact: Joanne Sandler, Deputy Director for Programmes, United
Nations Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM), 304 East 45th St, 15th
Floor, New York NY 10017, USA, telephone +1-212/906 6400, fax +1-
212/906 6705, e-mail <joanne.sandler@undp.org>, website (www.unifem.org).
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S-G
Reports on Staffing Equality |
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The United Nations has given
itself a mixed report card for its efforts to reach the General Assemblys
target of equality between the numbers of men and women in professional
and managerial staffing. A report from Secretary-General Kofi Annan
to the GA says although the proportion of women at those levels in
the Secretariat, with contracts for one year or longer, rose 1.7%
last year to 37.4% on 30 June of this year, the analysis of
the longer-term trends portrays a picture of uneven progress in womens
representation at all levels.
The reasons cited include unacknowledged biases among hiring managers
who are not being held accountable. Another cause relates to expectations
that managers must work long hours and always be available,
thereby fostering imbalances between work and home life. In addition,
jobs for spouses of UN employees are not always easy to find in
UN host countries and permission to work is sometimes slow in coming,
making transfers impossible for some families, the survey adds.
The annual growth rate towards the 50/50 goal is expected to rise
by only 0.4% in professional and higher categories for appointments
of one year or more, the report says. It recommends some three dozen
measures to deal with all the obstacles to womens advancement
that have been found so far while suggesting a deeper examination
of other obstructions that are more difficult to analyze because
barriers to career progression for women become more informal
and, thus, harder to identify, particularly at the more senior levels
of the Organization.
An accompanying chart shows that on 30 June of this year women
formed 83.3% of staff at the lowest professional level, the P-1,
but 16.7% of the highest staff level, the Under-Secretaries-General.
For positions filled according to geographical region, women make
up 42.3% of staff and the ratio is growing by 1% per year, the report
says.
Meanwhile, the Secretary-General fully shares the views of
the General Assembly regarding the issue of creating a work environment
in the United Nations system that is free of harassment, especially
sexual harassment, and remains firmly committed to a zero-tolerance
policy in this regard.
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ILO:
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New media, multimedia and information
and communication technologies (ICTs) may increase the demand for
journalists, editors, artists and others in the media, graphical and
culture sectors, but compromise the quality of their work and of their
working conditions, according to a report by the International Labour
Organization (ILO). The Future of Work and Quality in the Information
Society: The Media, Culture, Graphical Sector notes that computerization
is tending to create jobs in the sector rather than killing them,
although some segments are experiencing serious declines in employment.
Conversely, the report also observes that the explosion of new
and multimedia is prompting growing concerns over the level of quality
of working conditions and of output in the media, cultural and graphical
sectors, and presents new challenges in terms of training for jobs
in the media and entertainment industry.
The impact of ICTs on the sector in terms of quality
can pose the question of whether certain primary standards of the
ILO are being met in the domains of fundamental principles and rights
at work, employment, social protection and social dialogue,
John Myers, author of the report, said. Questions of quality,
whether of the product, the content or of the profession, already
permeate debate in this field, he added. Copyright protection
for the materials that writers and performers produce is also an
issue at stake, ILO warns.
The report stresses that many of the new opportunities will
arise for geographically mobile, well-educated, multiskilled and
adaptable people, but more and more jobs are likely to be unstable,
temporary assignments without fringe benefits or social security
coverage, and some job losses or downgrading are inevitable.
Government, employer and worker representatives from around 50
countries met at an ILO meeting in Geneva from 18-22 October to
discuss the trends affecting several occupational groups in these
industries. The meeting also examined how the World Summit on the
Information Society (WSIS, see NGLS Roundup 109) process has reflected
on issues relating to work and quality in the sector, as well as
possible relevant topics for the second phase of WSIS, to be held
in Tunis in November 2005.
During phase one of WSIS, ILO argued that developing countries
must identify policies and programmes to allow workers and employers,
especially women and the young, to fully exploit the potential of
ICTs, to minimize the pain of adjustment and to permit all economic
sectors to benefit from the gains accrued from using the technologies.
ILO also stressed the importance of ensuring respect for international
labour standards in the process.
Contact: Sectoral Activities Department, ILO, 4, route des Morillons,
CH-1211 Geneva 22, Switzerland, telephone +41-22/799 7501, fax +41-22/799
7050, e-mail <sector@ilo.org>, website (www.ilo.org/public/english/dialogue/sector/index.htm).
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International
Day for Disaster Reduction
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Early warning about looming
natural disasters and other advance planning could halve the rates
of death and destruction they cause over the decade beginning in 2010
compared to the previous ten-year period, according to the World Meteorological
Organization (WMO), marking the International Day for Disaster Reduction,
observed on 13 October.
WMO Secretary-General Michel Jarraud stressed the importance of
building a culture of prevention. This could be done through
further improvements in risk assessment, monitoring, forecasting
for early warnings, capacity building and raising the awareness
of the public as well as decision makers through education and sharing
of knowledge and information, he said.
According to the Centre for Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters,
in the decade from 1992-2001, natural disasters related to weather,
climate and flooding killed 622,000 people and adversely affected
another two billion. The total value of economic losses over
the same period is estimated at US$446 billion, accounting for about
65% of damage arising from all natural disasters, WMO said.
This years disasters included hurricanes in the Caribbean
and the United States, typhoons in the West Pacific, floods in East
and Southeast Asia and the invasion of northwest Africa by locusts
whose life cycles depend on weather conditions.
In his message, Executive Director of the United Nations Environment
Programme (UNEP) Klaus Toepfer called attention to the link between
environmental neglect and poverty, which together turn natural hazards
into disasters. Time and again we see ordinary natural phenomena,
such as heavy rains or prolonged dry spells, triggering extraordinary
and sometimes catastrophic events. Wetlands could reduce flooding,
forested watersheds could help to prevent landslides, while mangroves
and coral reefs could lessen the effect of coastal storms and extreme
tides, he said. The loss of these and other similarly important
services has widespread implications for development.
UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan emphasized the need to learn from
past mistakes. All should work together to improve the chain
of information and decision making, so that their communities are
better prepared should hazards strike again, he said. He also
said next years World Conference on Disaster Reduction, to
be held in Kobe, Japan from 18-22 January, would provide an opportunity
to establish clear guidelines for the future. The conference aims
to raise the profile of risk reduction and emphasize the importance
of education and public awareness for disaster reduction.
Also on the International Day, a new childrens board game
called Riskland was launched. It harnesses the power
of fun to teach youngsters what to do in the event of a natural
disaster. Riskland was first developed by the United Nations Childrens
Fund (UNICEF) and the UN staff of the International Strategy for
Disaster Reduction (UN/ISDR) regional office for Latin America and
the Caribbean, and has spread worldwide. It is being translated
into nearly 40 languages.
One of Risklands creators, Elina Palm, said that some 254
million people were affected by disasters caused by natural hazardsa
180% increase compared to 1990. Last year, the economic losses were
estimated to be US$65 billion and every year thousands of people,
mostly women and children, were killed by natural disasters. Emphasizing
the importance of children learning at an early age about the long-term
benefits of disaster reduction, Ms. Palm pointed out that they can
spread messages about the issue throughout their communities.
Contact: UN staff of the International Strategy for Disaster
Reduction, Palais des Nations, CH-1211 Geneva 10, Switzerland, telephone
+41-22/917 2529, fax +41-22/917 0563, e-mail <isdr0wcdr@un.org>,
website (www.unisdr.org).
Carine Richard-Van Maele, Chief, Communications and Public Affairs,
WMO, telephone +41-22/730 8315, fax +41-22/730 8027, e-mail <cvanmaele@wmo.int>,
website (www.wmo.int).
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State
of the Worlds Cities Report 2004/2005
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A report by the United Nations Settlements Programme (UN-HABITAT)
lauds multiculturalism as an urban phenomenon that should be celebrated,
not feared, maintaining that multiculturalism enhances the fabric
of societies and brings colour and vibrancy to every city it touches.
State of the World's Cities Report 2004/2005 shows that there are
approximately 175 million documented international migrants worldwide
and the flow of humanity into the worlds cities is fuelling
a new multiculturalism that has the potential to broaden the cultural
and ethnic dimensions of cities. However, it notes that some cities
have been unable to cope with multiculturalism, which has generated
increasing xenophobia and ethnic tensions. It therefore calls on
local governments to help create harmonious and inclusive multicultural
cities by combating xenophobic ideologies and anti-immigration policies.
According to the report, the more developed economies attract most
of the international migrants (77 million), followed by the transition
economies of Eastern Europe and the former Soviet republics (33
million), Asia and the Pacific (23 million) and the Middle East
and North Africa (21 million).
In many cities, lack of affordable housing and discriminatory practices
force the newcomers to live spatially segregated lives in ghettos
where they suffer labour exploitation, social exclusion and violence.
This is unfortunate, says the report, because immigrants make important
economic contributions, not only to the urban economies of the host
countries, but also to the countries that they leave behind. Remittances
back home are second only to oil in terms of international monetary
flows, providing an important and reliable source of foreign exchange
finance. In 2003, for example, the Indian Diaspora sent back US$15
billion, exceeding the revenues generated by the countrys
software industry, the report notes.
In his foreword, UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan said that policy
makers need to plan for cities of difference that are
open to all and exclude none, and which are able to capitalize on
the benefits of a multicultural existence. This requires the engagement
of all non-governmental and community stakeholders, on the basis
of legislation that guarantees citizens right to the city,
and judicial systems that enforce those rights.
UN-HABITAT Executive Director Anna Tibaijuka said that the report
provided valuable information on progress made in the implementation
of the Habitat Agenda and towards the realization of the Millennium
Development Goals (MDGs) and targets on slums, water and sanitation.
The report shows how poverty is increasing in many cities
and how this is partly an outcome of the uneven costs and benefits
of economic globalization. In addition, the report shows how urban
poverty has been increasingly concentrated in particular neighbourhoods
that have generally become the habitats of the urban poor and minority
groups: racial minorities in some societies, international immigrant
groups in others, she said.
The last two decades have witnessed a transformation of the global
economy, which has led to vast economic, social and political realignments
in many countries and cities. The trend towards open markets has
enriched some countries and cities tremendously, while others have
suffered greatly, the report says. World trade in this period has
grown from about US$580 billion in 1980 to a projected US$6.3 trillion
in 2004, an eleven-fold increase. Flows of capital, labour, technology
and information have also increased tremendously, and have transformed
the role of cities in a globalizing world.
State of the Worlds Cities predicts that the worlds
urban population will grow from 2.86 billion in 2000 to 4.98 billion
by 2030. It further reveals that urban-based economic activities
account for more than 50% of gross domestic product (GDP) in all
countries, and up to 80% in more urbanized countries in Latin America
and Europe.
The report is available online (www.unhabitat.org/ mediacentre/sowckit.asp).
Contact: Sharad Shankardess, Head, Press & Media Unit, UN-HABITAT,
PO Box 30030, Nairobi, Kenya, telephone +254-20/623153, fax +254-20/624060,
e-mail <sharad.shankardass@unhabitat.org>, website (www.unhabitat.org).
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World
Habitat Day: 4 October
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Since 1985, World Habitat Day has been celebrated on the first
Monday in October each year, a day set aside to reflect on the state
of human settlements and the basic right to adequate shelter and
to remind the world of its collective responsibility for the future
of the human habitat.
Celebrated this year on 4 October under the theme Citiesengines
of rural development, the Day underlined the importance of
mutually beneficial linkages that are essential for the development
of both cities and rural areas. According to the United Nations
Human Settlements Programme (UN-HABITAT), urban markets provide
a powerful incentive for increased rural production and income,
while expanding rural markets create increased demand for production
of goods manufactured in urban areas. In the long run, cities drive
secondary and tertiary investment of capital derived from primary
production in rural areas.
In the next 25 years, virtually all population growth will
take place in the worlds cities, most of it in the cities
of developing countries, said UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan
in a message read on his behalf by Anna Tibaijuka, UN-HABITAT Executive
Director, during a ceremony held in Nairobi, which sought to highlight
the phenomenal rate and social-economic significance of urbanization
in the developing world. Large-scale migration to cities as a result
of rural poverty has led to the proliferation of slums.
The fastest growing cities will be secondary and market towns,
which are especially close to rural areas. This growth can help
to improve rural life and ease the problems associated with mega-cities.
But to do so, it will need to be well-managed, with significant
investments in communication, transport channels and other infrastructure,
and with concerted efforts to ensure that all people have access
to adequate services, Mr. Annan said.
As part of World Habitat Day celebrations, Kenyan President Mwai
Kibaki joined Ms. Tibaijuka in Kibera, an informal settlement located
outside of Nairobioften referred to as Africas
biggest slumto call attention to the Kenya Slum Upgrading
Programme, a joint project which got underway in January 2003. It
involves the construction of 14 blocks of flats and 770 housing
units and will also ensure the provision of basic services such
as water and sanitation. UN-HABITAT says improvements in other informal
settlements across the country will follow suit, in a process that
is expected to take 10-15 years.
We wish to remind policy makers around the world that sustainable
development can only be achieved if rural and urban areas are considered
part of an inter-dependent, mutually reinforcing economic and social
order, Ms. Tibaijuka told the crowd that had gathered for
the ceremony.
Contact: Sharad Shankardess, Head, Press & Media Unit, UN-HABITAT,
PO Box 30030, Nairobi, Kenya, telephone +254-20/623153, fax +254-20/624060,
e-mail <sharad.shankardass@unhabitat.org>, website (www.unhabitat.org).
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Basel
Convention COP-7 Meets
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The seventh meeting of the Conference of the Parties (COP-7) to
the Basel Convention on the Control of Transboundary Movements of
Hazardous Wastes and their Disposal was held in Geneva from 25-29
October 2004, bringing together over 450 participants to discuss
partnerships for meeting the global waste challengethe main
theme of COP-7. Currently, there are 162 State Parties to the Basel
Convention.
In his message to the meeting, UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan
said, Our world is generating more and more hazardous and
other waste each year, and it is increasingly intermingled with
municipal and household wastes. Waste generation has therefore become
a global challenge. We can only address that challenge through partnerships,
innovative thinking and cooperation at all levels. We must shift
from end-of-pipe solutions to an integrated life-cycle
approachone that encompasses generation, storage, transport,
treatment, recycling, recovery and final disposal.
Minimizing and safely managing hazardous and other wastes
contributes to the UN Millennium Development Goals of reducing poverty
and improving access to safe drinking water and sanitation,
said Klaus Töpfer, Executive Director United Nations Environment
Programme (UNEP), which provides the Conventions secretariat.
The Basel Convention needs to mobilize more resources and
further engage industry and other partners if it is to achieve its
full potential for protecting human health and the environment.
Investments in effective systems for separating hazardous from non-hazardous
wastes at the local level should be an important priority,
he added.
COP-7 launched new talks for determining the legal status of obsolete
shipswhich generally contain large amounts of hazardous wasteson
route to ship-breaking yards and for addressing the problem of abandoned
ships. However, it failed to secure the entry into force of the
Basel Ban Amendment that would ban the transboundary movement of
hazardous recyclable commodities and wastes from developed countries
to developing countries. So far, 44 countries have ratified the
Basel Ban Amendment, and 62 are needed before it can enter into
force. A number of countries, including Australia, the US, Canada,
Japan, and the UK, as well as various organizations, such as the
International Chamber of Commerce, oppose the ban.
COP-7 concluded by adopting a ministerial statement setting out
strategies for mobilizing additional resources to address hazardous
wastes. The statement calls for strengthening partnerships with
industries and other international organizations and agreements,
in particular the Rotterdam Convention on trade in hazardous chemicals
and pesticides and the Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic
Pollutants. It also encourages governments to consider setting their
own individual or regional targets for minimizing wastes. As adequate
funding remains an ongoing problem for the Basel Convention, a number
of participants expressed their hope that partnerships could prove
to be an effective way of mobilizing adequate and sustainable resources.
Contact: Secretariat of the Basel Convention, 11-13 chemin des
Anémones, Building D, 1219 Châtelaine (Geneva), Switzerland,
telephone +41-22/917 8218, fax +41-22/797 3454, e-mail <sbc@unep.ch>,
website (www.basel.int).
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CITES
COP-13: Strengthening Wildlife Management
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The 13th Meeting of the Conference of the Parties (COP-13) to the
Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild
Fauna and Flora (CITES) met in Bangkok from 3-14 October, attended
by some 1,200 participants from 154 governments and numerous observer
organizations. It closed after agreeing decisions to strengthen
wildlife management, combat illegal trafficking and update the trade
rules for a wide range of plant and animal species.
The Bangkok conference has crafted solutions to meet the
particular needs of many wildlife species that are either endangered
or that could become so if traded unsustainably, said CITES
Secretary-General Willem Wijnstekers, whose secretariat is administered
by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP). These
solutions seek to conserve the earths rich heritage of biological
diversity while supporting the sustainable development of local
communities and national economies, he added.
COP-13 decided to place ramin (a Southeast Asian tree that produces
high-value timber) and agarwood (which produces agar
oil) on Appendix II. By requiring the use of CITES export permits,
these listings will improve the ability of the ramin and agarwood
range States to manage tree stocks. It will also allow both exporters
and importers to ensure that trade is sustainable and to tackle
illegal trade.
The great white shark and the humphead wrassetwo fish species
of great commercial valuewere also added to CITES and can
now only be traded with permits. Another marine species, the Irrawaddy
dolphin, was transferred from Appendix II to Appendix I, which forbids
all commercial trade. Appendix I lists species that are the most
endangered among CITES-listed animals and plants.
In recent years CITES has started to list commercially valuable
fish species such as sturgeon, seahorses, and the basking and whale
sharks. The addition of more listings suggests that governments
believe CITES can contribute to the goal agreed at the 2002 Johannesburg
World Summit on Sustainable Development of restoring fishery stocks
to sustainable levels by 2015, Mr. Wijnstekers said.
The African elephant was the subject of extensive debate. The conference
agreed to an action plan for cracking down on unregulated domestic
markets in elephant ivory. Under the plan, all African elephant
range States will strengthen their legislation and their enforcement
efforts, launch public awareness campaigns and report on progress
by the end of March 2005. The meeting also agreed that Namibia and
South Africa may open up trophy hunting of the black rhino for the
first time in many years, with an annual quota of five animals each.
Swaziland may also open up strictly controlled hunting of its population
of white rhino and export some live animals. The intent of these
decisions is to allow the range States to manage their rhino herds
more effectively and to earn income for rhino conservation.
Decisions that will promote the practical implementation of the
Convention were taken on economic incentives, guidelines for sustainable
use, and synergies with the Convention on Biological Diversity,
among others.
On the sidelines of the meeting, the Secretariat announced the
2004 quotas for caviar exports from the Caspian Sea. The five Caspian
Sea States agreed to take stronger action on sturgeon conservation
and illegal trade and harvesting. The new rules require caviar processed
this year to be exported by 31 March 2005. From 2006 onwards, all
caviar must be exported in the same year that it is produced, with
no opportunity to carry over stocks from one year to
the next. In addition, there can be no re-exports of caviar more
than 18 months in age, another loophole that illicit traders have
used.
This is a major victory in the war against the caviar criminals,
said CITES Deputy Secretary-General Jim Armstrong. This will
bring stability to the caviar trade and close the door on the criminal
opportunists who have engaged in large-scale fraud.
COP-14 will be held in 2007 in The Netherlands.
Contact: Juan Vasquez, CITES, Chemin des Anémones 15,
1219 Châtelaine, Geneva, Switzerland, telephone +41-22/9178156,
fax +41-22/797 3417, e-mail <juan.vasquez@unep.ch>, website
(www.cites.org).
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Childhood
Pesticide Poisoning
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According to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), the
United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and the World Health
Organization (WHO), pesticide poisoning is a serious health problem
that disproportionately affects infants and children. The agencies
are calling for urgent steps to minimize youngsters exposure
to potentially deadly chemicals.
An estimated 1-5 million cases of pesticide poisonings occur each
year, resulting in several thousand fatalities, including children,
according to Childhood Pesticide Poisoning: Information for Advocacy
and Action, a report prepared by Lynn Goldman, Professor, Environmental
Health Sciences, John Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public Health
(USA) for FAO, UNEP and the WHO.
Children face higher risks from pesticides than adults because
they may be more susceptible or are exposed more to such chemicals
over the course of their lifetime, the report says. Most of the
poisonings take place in rural areas of developing countries, where
safeguards typically are inadequate or lacking altogether. Although
developing nations use just a quarter of the worlds production
of pesticides, they experience 99% of the deaths due to pesticide
poisoning.
Diet and poverty are two of the major sources of exposure for children,
Childhood Pesticide Poisoning finds. Food and water containing pesticide
residues may be a source of chronic, low-level pesticide exposure;
growing food on or near contaminated soils puts children at risk;
and even pesticides stored incorrectly in the field or the household
may contaminate food or water.
In poor families, children often help on family farms where pesticides
are used; pesticide users, including teenagers, may lack access
to protective equipment or receive no training; and in many developing
countries, the marking and advertising of pesticides is often uncontrolled
or illicit.
To minimize risk, FAO, UNEP and the WHO urge reducing and eliminating
possible sources of pesticide exposure to children and home and
at work, keeping such chemicals out their reach, and cutting the
use of agricultural pesticides through Integrated Pest Management
(IPM). Other steps to reduce the harmful effects include training
health workers to recognize and manage pesticide poisoning, providing
training to people on how to use pesticides safely, running educational
and information campaigns in the media, and addressing all aspects
of pesticide management from manufacturing until use or disposal.
Tackling the risks to children of pesticide exposure and poisoning
requires comprehensive strategies, which should be designed for
the local level and supported nationally, regionally and internationally.
They should include research activities on how to develop effective
economic and legal instruments. In addition, they should ensure
that the public is informed, health conditions are monitored and,
where necessary, treatment programmes are established, the report
suggests (available online www.who.int/ceh/publications/pestipoison/en).
Contacts: Melinda Henry, Information Officer, WHO, 20, avenue
Appia, CH-1211 Geneva 27, Switzerland, telephone +41-22/791 2535,
fax +41-22/791 4858, e-mail <henrym@who.int>, website (www.comminit.com/st2002/sld-6526.html).
Eric Falt, Spokesperson and Director of UNEP's Division of Communications
and Public Information, PO Box 30552, Nairobi, Kenya, telephone
+254-(0)20/623292, e-mail <eric.falt@unep.org>, website (www.unep.org).
Erwin Northoff, Information Officer, FAO, Viale delle Terme
di Caracalla, 00100 Rome, Italy, telephone +39-6/5705 3105, fax
+39-6/5705 4975, e-mail <Erwin.northoff@fao.org>, website
(www.fao.org).
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World
Food Day: Biodiversity & Food Security
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World Food Day was observed on 16 October and this years
theme was Biodiversity for Food Security, which sought
to highlight the role of biodiversity in the fight against hunger.
UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, in his message commemorating the
Day, called attention to the 840 million people in the world who
suffer from chronic hunger.
Such large-scale hunger is not only unprecedented but also
should be unacceptable in our world of plenty. In a world in which
enough food exists to feed every man, woman and child, we need to
do far betterpolitically, economically, scientifically, logisticallyif
we are to achieve the Millennium Development Goal of reducing by
half, by the year 2015, the proportion of people who suffer from
hunger, he said.
The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) estimates
that about three-quarters of the genetic diversity of agricultural
crops have been lost over the last century. And of 6,300 animal
breeds, 1,350 are endangered or already extinct.
The worlds biodiversity is under threat and this could
severely compromise global food security, FAO Director-General
Jacques Diouf said. As a consequence, the food supply becomes
more vulnerable, there are less opportunities for growth and innovation
in agriculture and less capacity for agriculture to adapt to environmental
changes or to the appearance of new pests and diseases, he
added.
According to FAO, global efforts to conserve plants and animals
in gene banks, botanical gardens and protected areas are vital,
but an equally important task is to maintain biodiversity on farms
and in nature. Conserving biodiversity for agriculture will require
efforts on many fronts including measures to preserve the environment,
better education, increased research and government support.
In the past, the contributions made by farmers in the developing
world towards the preservation of agricultural biodiversity have
not been properly appreciated, FAO said. Today, however, their rights
have been recognized and incorporated into the Treaty on Plant Genetic
Resources for Food and Agriculture, which entered into force in
June this year (see Go Between 103). The Treaty is a binding international
instrument that:
- secures the conservation and sustainable utilization of the worlds
agricultural genetic diversity;
- guarantees that farmers and breeders have access to the genetic
materials they need; and
- ensures that farmers receive a fair and equitable share of the
benefits derived from their work.
According to FAO, a Global Crop Diversity Trust is also being established
to strengthen the capacity of developing countries to preserve agricultural
biodiversity and maintain comprehensive gene banks.
Contact: Pierre Antonios, Information Officer, FAO, Viale delle
Terme di Caracalla, 00100 Rome, Italy, telephone +39-06/5705 5373,
e-mail <pierre.antonios@fao.org>, website (www.fao.org).
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FAO
Reports on Insects and Food Security
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A study released by the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)
stresses that edible insects such as caterpillars and grubs should
be considered an alternative source of nutrition in efforts to overcome
food insecurity in central African countries.
Edible insects from forests are an important source of protein,
and unlike those from agricultural land, they are free of pesticides,
said Paul Vantomme, an FAO forestry expert, noting that caterpillars
are already an important food intake for many people in central
Africa. More than 90% of participants in a survey in Botswana said
they consumed caterpillars, with 85% in the Central African Republic
and 70% in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) doing the
same.
For every 100 grams of dried caterpillars, there are about 53 grams
of proteins, about 15% of fat and about 17% of carbohydrates, according
to the Contribution of Forest Insects to Food Security. The insects
are also believed to have a higher proportion of protein and fat
than beef and fish with a high-energy value. Depending on the species,
caterpillars are considered to be rich in minerals such as potassium,
calcium, magnesium, zinc, phosphorus and iron, as well as various
vitamins. Research shows that 100 grams of insects provide more
than 100% of the daily requirements of the respective minerals and
vitamins. Experts believe that the collection of edible insects
by hand could prove to be a potential source of income for rural
populations, especially women, because it requires little capital
income.
The nutritional and economic value of edible insects is often
neglected and we should further encourage their collection and commercialization,
given the benefits to the environment and human health, said
Mr. Vantomme, noting that insects were already widely offered in
local village markets and restaurants.
The study shows that trans-border trade in edible insects is significant
not only within Central African countries, but also in Sudan and
Nigeria. Dried caterpillars are also exported to France and Belgium.
Contact: Cheemin Kwon, Forestry Information Officer, FAO, Viale
delle Terme di Caracalla, 00100 Rome, Italy, telephone +39-6/5705
4465, e-mail <cheemin.kwon@fao.org>, website (www.fao.org).
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World
Bank Report: Doing Business in 2005
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A World Bank report finds that the past year has been good for
doing business in 58 of the 145 Doing Business sample countries.
According to Doing Business in 2005, streamlined business regulations,
strengthened property rights and the creation of an enabling environment
for businesses to raise financing have helped these countries.
Doing Business in 2005 is the second in a series of annual reports
investigating the scope and manner of regulations that enhance business
activity and those that constrain it. The 2004 report, entitled
Understanding Regulation, presented five indicators: starting a
business, hiring and firing workers, enforcing contracts, getting
credit and closing a business. The 2005 report updates these measures
and adds another two sets: registering poverty and protecting investors.
The indicators are used to analyze economic and social outcomes,
such as productivity, investment, informality, corruption, unemployment
and poverty, while identifying what reforms have worked, where and
why.
The analysis in this years Doing Business report leads to
three main findings. Firstly, businesses in poor countries face
much larger regulatory burdens than those in rich countries. They
face three times the administrative costs, and nearly twice as many
bureaucratic procedures and delays. Secondly, heavy regulation and
weak property rights exclude the poor from doing business. In poor
countries 40% of the economy is informal. Faced with rigid employment
regulations, women, youth and low-skilled workers are most prone
to opt-out of the formal economy. Thirdly, the report suggests that
payoffs from regulatory reform can be substantial. A hypothetical
improvement to the top quartile of countries on the ease of doing
business is associated with up to 2 percentage points more in annual
economic growth. Doing Business in 2005 is available online (http://rru.worldbank.org/
doingbusiness).
Contact: Phil Hay, Media Relations Officer, World Bank, 1818
H Street NW, Washington DC 20433, USA, telephone +1-202/473 1796,
fax +1-202/522 2632, e-mail <phay@worldbank.org>, website
(www.worldbank.org).
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UNODC:
Container Control Programme
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The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) has teamed
with customs agencies around the world to combat the illegal transport
of people, weapons and drugs in the more than seven million shipping
containers that move around the globe each day. The Container Control
Programme is intended to support port control measures in developing
countries, bringing together new teams of customs officials and
police, and providing them with training and equipment to target
illicit trafficking via maritime freight containers.
Launched by UNODC in partnership with the World Customs Organization
(WCO), the programmes US$1.4 million first phase will begin
at the ports of Guayaquil (Ecuador) and Dakar (Senegal). Similar
port control activities should expand to Pakistan and Ghana next
year.
According to UNODC, container traffic has risen over the past ten
years to 220 million units in 2000, and is expected to double by
2012, as licit merchandise transported in containers generates legitimate
revenue for hundreds of millions of people. UNODC warns that containers
also facilitate the trafficking of large quantities of heroin and
cocaine. They also often serve the trade in weapons, chemical waste
and even human beings, and are used to ship money earned illicitly
from organized crime.
Visiting borders and ports in developing countries, one can
notice a huge number of trucks and containers without the specialized
controls needed to separate commercial trade from criminal activities,
said UNODC Executive Director Antonio Maria Costa. More information
on the Container Control Programme is available online (www.unodc.org/pdf/containerbriefpresoct04.ppt).
Contact: United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, Vienna International
Centre, PO Box 500, A-1400 Vienna, Austria, telephone +43 1 26060
0, fax +43 1 26060 5866, e-mail <unodc@unodc.org>, website
(www.unodc.org).
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UN / NGO COOPERATION
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WAVE:
Ending Gender Apartheid |
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Under the banner Women As the Voice for the Environment (WAVE),
the first Global Womens Assembly on the Environment was held
in Nairobi from 11-13 October 2004, bringing together over 140 women
from 60 countries including seven ministers of environment from
Iran, Kenya, South Africa, Swaziland and Sweden and other high level
representatives. The WAVE assembly was sponsored by the United Nations
Environment Programme (UNEP) and the Womens Environment and
Development Organization (WEDO).
The Assembly aimed to put womens issues at the centre of
the global environmental effort to deliver the Millennium Developments
Goals (MDGs) and the World Summit on Sustainable Developments
(WSSD) Plan of Implementation. It also highlighted the crucial roles
women play in conservation and sustainable development. Speaking
at the opening ceremony, UNEP Executive Director Klaus Toepfer said,
In the past, the role of women and their know-how has often
been sidelined. I sincerely hope that our assembly signals an end
to this gender apartheid. All too often women are treated like second-class
citizens, with fewer rights and lower status than men. I hope we
have now started a WAVE that will wash away the inequities of the
past and bring women into the centre of environment and development
issues.
The Assembly included a number of roundtables ranging from A
World in ConflictA World in Peace: Gender sensitive policies
on sustainable livelihoods to Womens rights, environment,
poverty and health to Starting a Mentorship ProgrammeA
world in need of female leadership. It also included workshops
and working group and plenary sessions.
During the conference, leading women environmentalists called for
research into the effect of toxic chemicals on the health of women
and girls as they urged governments to make funds available to associations
of poor women for environmental projects such as water, sanitation
and poverty alleviation schemes and ecosystem management. They also
recommended identifying the roles of women in the environmental
recovery of war-torn zones.
Participants developed a Manifesto on Women and Environment that
includes concrete policy recommendations and a portfolio of specific
project ideas. Through the manifesto, delegates stressed that globalization,
militarization, fundamentalism, and the market-driven economic model
have undermined the achievement of the agreed goals. The manifesto
also included expressions of similar deep concern over the
ever-widening gap between rich and poor, unsustainable
levels of production and consumption and the culture
of fear and threat, with its many conflicts and increasing levels
of violence and militarization.
The Network of Women Ministers for the Environment drafted a separate
declaration on the theme of gender equality and empowerment. Their
declaration, as well as the WAVE Manifesto and WAVE recommendations
and project ideas, will be forwarded to UNEPs Governing Council
in 2005. They will be also forwarded to relevant intergovernmental
meetings, including the Beijing+10 review session and the WSSD follow-up.
Contact: Eric Falt, Spokesperson and Director of UNEP's Division
of Communications and Public Information, PO Box 30552, Nairobi,
Kenya, telephone +254-(0)20/623292, e-mail <eric.falt@unep.org>,
website (www.unep.org).
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ILC Launches New Website |
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The International
Land Coalitions (ILC) new website is now up and running (www.landcoalition.org),
with a number of new features, including:
- Partners Map: a world map showing the location of all ILC partners
and the various activities they have carried out with the ILC.
- Partners/Stakeholders page: provides links to the websites of the
more than 150 organizations involved with the ILC.
- Links: provides links to land-related organizations, portals and
databases.
- Documents by theme: documents are classified by 17 topical land-related
themes.
The International Land Coalition is:
- an institution of members, working to increase the rural poors
secure access to resources by strengthening the individual and collective
capacity of its members and partners;
- a global convenor on land issues, using its multistakeholder convening
capacity to strengthen networks for collective action;
- a mechanism to open spaces for dialogue with policy and decision
makers;
- an arena for innovation and scaling up of community-based experiences;
- an advocate for the participation by partners, in national and
global forums on land policy and related operational issues;
- a communication network forming a hub for the interchange of ideas,
best practices and lessons learnt; and,
- a monitor of levels of compliance with programmes for action on
land issues embedded in international agreements and summit outcomes.
More information on ILC and its activities is available online.
Contact: Julie Carle, International Land Coalition Communications
Officer, Secretariat at IFAD, Via del Serafico 107, 00142 Rome,
Italy, telephone +39-06/5459 2113, e-mail <j.carle@ifad.org>,
website (www.landcoalition.org).
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NGO UPDATE
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Child
Soldiers Global Report 2004 |
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According to a report by the Coalition to Stop the Use of Child
Soldiers, governments are undermining progress in ending the use
of children as soldiers as children are fighting in almost every
major conflict, in both government and opposition forces. They are
being injured, subjected to horrific abuse and killed. The Coalition
has called for the immediate enforcement of a ban on the use of
child soldiers, calling on governments to ban all recruitment of
children under 18 into any armed force.
Children should be protected from warfare not used to wage
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