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92 JUNE-JULY 2002
WFP Sounds the
Alarm
Viera de Mello named High Comm..
Anna Tibaijuka named Habitat Ex. Dir.
World Bank Donors Increase...
Security Council Adopts Resolution...
SG Speaks on Globalization and Role..
UNCTAD SG: Policy Space for Dev..
Open Letter fails, Bush withholds Funds
Optional Protocol to Torture Conv..
Preview of World Economy
UNECA Economic Report on Africa
Arab Human Development Report
IASC Warns of Funding Shortage Conference on
Disarment holds 2nd..
First World Day Against Child Labour
CEDAW Holds 24th Session
UN Publishes Study on Abortion Polic..
New Basel Guidelines to Improve Cycl.
World Day to Combat
Desertification
State of African Environment
INC-6 on Persistent Organic Pollutants
UN Introduces Internet Oceans Atlas
UNESCO Launches Global Alliance
ODCCP Releases Report on Illicit Drug
WHO Releases Draft Text of Tobacco.. |
AI:
No Trade-off Between Human Rights & Security
PAN Celebrates 20th Anniversary
Anti Slavery International Releases Report
"We The People" Campaign"
Other News
African Union Launched
USCR Says Number of World's UprootedGrowing
Zimbabwe Invokes TRIPs and Health Delaration
Latino Farmworkers Face Greater Cancer Risk |
World Food
Programme Sounds the Alarm
World Food Summit: Five Years later
UNCTAD Proposes Alternative Approach to Poverty Reduction
ECOSOC High Level Segment on Education and Health Care
G-8 Summit Addresses African Development Assistance
Civil Society and the G-8
ILO Holds 90th Labour Conference
High Level Meeting Focuses on Digital Divide
Meetings on the UN Millenium Development Goals
Calendar
Guest Editorial:Ambassador Anwaral Karim Chowdury(High Representaive
for Least Developed countries) |
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AI: NO TRADE-OFF BETWEEN HUMAN RIGHTS & SECURITY
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The Amnesty International Report 2002,
which evaluates the human rights in the world during 2001, says
the world has undoubtedly changed since 11 September 2001. However,
the report points out that many things remain the same: a disregard
for human life and human dignity, as well as for economic, cultural
and social rights; and an escalation of violence in the Middle
East, Afghanistan and Colombia.
The report documents extra-judicial executions
in 47 countries; judicial executions in 31 countries; disappearances
in 35 countries; cases of torture and ill-treatment in 111 countries
and prisoners of conscience in at least 56 countries. However,
the organization says it believes that the true figures are much
higher.
Amnesty International says that in the
wake of the attacks of 11 September, a number of governments jumped
on the anti-terrorism bandwagon and seized the moment
to step up repression, undermine human rights protection and stifle
political dissent by imposing measures such as indefinite detention
without trial, special courts based on secret evidence, or cultural
and religious restrictions.
The universality of human rights
is facing the strongest challenge yet. Double-standards and selectivity
are becoming the norm, said Secretary-General of Amnesty
International Irene Khan. She continued, Security can not
and must not take precedence over human rights. The biggest danger
to human rights is when political and economic interests are allowed
to drive the human rights agenda.
The report notes that despite worldwide
celebrations of the 50th anniversary of the UN Refugee Convention,
core principles of refugee protection continued to be challenged
in 2001, as hundreds of thousands of refugees fleeing conflict
and human rights abuses were refused entry into neighbouring countries.
At the same time, the right of asylum-seekers to have their cases
examined came under severe attack in 2001.
In August 2001, Amnesty International
expanded its agenda and is urging that respect for human rights
encompass not only the universality, but also the indivisibility
of all rightseconomic, social and cultural as well as civil
and political. The organization says that as globalization spreads,
bringing greater wealth to some and destitution and despair to
others, human rights activists must promote not just legal justice
but also social justice. An ethical approach to globalization
can mean nothing less than a rights-based approach to development,
said Ms. Khan. The challenge we face, and the responsibility
we all shoulder, is to make human rights real for everyone, regardless
of background or belief.
Contact: Amnesty International, 99-119
Rosebery Avenue, London EC1R 4RE, United Kingdom, telephone +44-20/7814
6200, fax +44-20/7833 1510, e-mail <info@amnesty.org.uk>, website
www.amnesty.org.)
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PAN CELEBRATES 20TH ANNIVERSARY |
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The Pesticide Action Network (PAN), which
works to eliminate hazardous pesticides and to promote safer alternatives,
celebrates its 20th Anniversary this year. Formed in May 1982,
PAN currently links almost 1,000 organizations in some 60 countries,
coordinated by five regional centres.
Founding member and Programme Director
at PAN North America, Monica Moore says PAN had a three-part vision
from the start. First, to stop the poisoning and damage caused
by the misuse of pesticides. Second, to work towards a world where
food and fiber can be produced safely and plentifully, where agriculture
is carried out in a way that doesnt damage people or the
planet. The third part of the vision was to create a mechanism
giving individuals, groups or organizations access to information,
knowledge and other resources that exist in different parts of
the world.
Saying that the battleground is now even
more complicated by the trends of economic globalization, rapid
concentration of corporate power and the rewriting of intellectual
property rights to include patents on life, Ms. Moore speaks of
PANs role in the next two decades: I will be very
disappointed if were not able to leverage what weve
accomplished in the first 20 years and really pick up the pace.
I would like to see a lot of progress, rapid progress, in getting
bad products and chemistries off the planet in the next ten years.
[F]or starters, the term sustainable
development has just got to expand. Labor has to be in there,
fair and just trade relations have to be integral or the term
is a mockery. The challenge of scaling up from the individual
success story or pilot projectthe living proofs that it
can be doneto mainstream is also a major challenge. Its
not clear to me at this point what institutional structures will
help make that happen, Ms. Moore said.
Contact: PAN North America, 49 Powell
Street, Suite 500, San Francisco CA 94102, USA, telephone +1-415/981
1771, fax +1-415/981 1991, e-mail <panna@panna.org>, website
(www.panna.org).
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ANTI-SLAVERY INTERNATIONAL RELEASES REPORT |
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An estimated 27 million women, children
and men are forced into slavery around the world, while poverty,
vulnerability and lack of political will contribute to its continuation,
according to a series of reports by Anti-Slavery International
released to coincide with the 27th session of the United Nations
Working Group on Contemporary Forms of Slavery, held in Geneva
from 27-31 May 2002.
Anti-Slavery International is calling
on governments to end slavery and provides recommendations for
action. The report focuses on:
Bonded labour in Pakistan: many women, children and men
are forced to work for no wages. Poverty and starvation in the
Sindh Province force communities to accept landlords cash
advances. Many work from dawn until dusk and receive no wages.
A recent court ruling undermines existing protection.
Child domestic work and its relationship to sexual exploitation:
many of the millions of girls around the world who work as domestics
are denied freedom and education. They suffer physical and verbal
abuse, and for a large number, sexual abuse combined with working
in conditions of servitude makes them vulnerable to entry into
sex work.
Child trafficking to the United Arab Emirates: it is estimated
that hundreds of boys, aged between four and ten, are trafficked
from South Asia to the UAE and other Gulf States each year to
be camel jockeys. Camel racing is dangerous and can cause serious
injury and even death. In the UAE it is illegal to employ a child
under 15.
Forced labour and slavery in Sudan: between 5,000 and 14,000
people have been abducted in Sudan since 1983. The Sudanese Government
is failing to take adequate steps to end raiding and slavery.
Forced labour in Brazil: more than 1,000 people were rescued
from forced labour in 2001 by the Special Group for Mobile Inspection.
However, many more remain enslaved on Amazonian estates and landlords
are not being punished.
Forced labour in Mauritania: slavery was abolished in 1981,
but there has been little action to secure the slaves release
or punish those who use slaves.
Discussion at the UN working group conference
focused on the trafficking of Nigerian children, with several
NGOs urging more efforts by the countrys authorities to
combat the problem. Nigeria is believed to be the source of 70%
of Africas 70,000 victims of sex-slave trafficking.
The United Nations estimates the trafficking of women to be one
of the worlds most lucrative illegal industries at US$7
billion annually.
Contact: Beth Herzfeld, Press Officer,
Anti-Slavery Organization, The Stableyard, Broomgrove Road, London
SW9 9TL, telephone +44-20/7501 8920, fax +44-20/7738 4110, e-mail
<info@antislavery.org>, website (www.antislavery.org/index.htm).
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WE THE PEOPLES CAMPAIGN |
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In an effort to shore up greater public
support for policies to tame corporate-driven globalization,
and to protect national governments and the United Nations from
a perceived corporate takeover, a group of NGOs, led
by the Third World Network (TWN), is running a campaign rooted
in the opening lines of the UN Charter entitled We the Peoples
Believe Another World is Possible. The campaign was launched
away from the site of negotiations at a seeds ceremony in Bali
(Indonesia) during the Fourth Meeting of the Preparatory Committee
(PrepCom) of the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD).
It aims to gather one million signatures in time for the WSSD,
to be held in Johannesburg (South Africa) from 26 August-4 September
2002.
The petition states that citizens groups
are alarmed at the downgrading and weakening of the UN and
the escalating influence of the international financial and trade
organizations which they say do not hold to the spirit and
principles of the Charter. The petition also suggests that the
corporate sector is being given more rights, privileges and access
at a time when powerful governments are opposing and
walking away from treaties that are dealing with life and death
issues. The ten years between the UN Conference on Environment
and Development (UNCED) held in Rio in 1992 and the forthcoming
WSSD, they say, have been a triumph for corporate-driven globalization,
propelled by mercantile forces and economic liberalization.
However, there are reasons to be hopeful
as well, the petition says, including: the joining together of
citizens from the North in mass protest against globalization;
a body of innovative good practices from around the world; and
the building of alliances amongst communities, NGOs, scientists,
women, youth, some governments and parts of the UN.
The petition explicitly calls for the
following:
To change the course of corporate-driven globalization and
development paradigms that destroy peoples and nature;
To reject technologies and products that endanger nature,
health and life such as genetically modified organisms, nuclear
technology and toxic chemicals;
To reject the patenting of nature;
To reclaim nature and the rights of indigenous peoples and
local communities; and
To reclaim national governments and the United Nations from
corporate takeover.
The initial group of NGOs that endorsed
the campaign at the launch included TWN, Oilwatch, World Federalist
Movement, KONPHALINDO (Indonesia), Amigransa (Venezuela), Acción
Ecológica (Ecuador) and Tebtebba Foundation (Philippines).
Contact: Third World Network, 228 Macalister
Road, 10400 Penang, Malaysia, e-mail <twnet@po.jaring.my>,
website (www.twnside.org.sg).
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AFRICAN UNION LAUNCHED |
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The 40-year-old Organization of African
Unity (OAU) opened its final summit on 8 July in Durban (South
Africa), and was replaced on 9 July by the newly established 53-member
African Union (AU). The AU is meant to advance the work of African
leaders in reducing poverty and promoting good governance, and
will have close relations with the New Partnership for Africas
Development (NEPAD).
The AU, loosely modelled on the European
Union, will work to set up its own central bank and court of justice,
and will establish a single currency. It is equipped with a standby
peacekeeping force drawn from African armies and intended to intervene
in any African conflict involving crimes against humanity.
South African President Thabo Mbeki is
serving as the Unions first chairman, which will inherit
US$42 million in debt from the OAU, and only 16 of the 53 OAU
Member States have settled their dues. It is regrettable
to note that at this juncture, the OAU is bequeathing to the commission
(secretariat) of the African Union a heritage which is far from
positive, said OAU Secretary General Amara Essy. We
have to end the war and get the economy off the ground, take care
of the basic welfare of our people, before we can get the time
to look at our regional and international debt obligations and
plan a payment schedule.
During the opening of the 38th Assembly
of Heads of State and Government of the OAU, President Mbeki spoke
on the AUs role: Our experience of the last forty
years says that we have a duty radically to change the structure
and content of our political, economic and social relations with
the rest of the world. Among other things, we have to cease being
merely an exporter of raw materials and an exporter of capital
to the developed world because of an unsustainable debt burden.
We have to end the situation according to which our continent
seems condemned to the increasing impoverishment of its people,
continuing underdevelopment and global marginalization.
UN Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA)
Executive Secretary K.Y. Amoako pledged UNECAs full backing.
We at ECA are invested in the African Union and will do
all we can to help make it a major success, he said. Just
as we are coming to the end of a series of international meetings
creating added solidarity with Africa, we are also entering a
new era of internal solidarity.
South African Foreign Minister Dlamini
Zuma, in his closing address at the OAU Council of Ministers,
said, We have come to the last meeting of the Organization
of African Unity. In actual fact this period does not represent
the death of our OAU but its rebirth as the African Union. The
Organization of African Unity has achieved its principal mandate
of the liquidation of the systems of colonialism and apartheid
crime against humanity in the continent. We have wrapped and wound
up the affairs of our Organization in readiness to address new
challenges. However, the most important challenge facing us is
to ensure that the new AU works for the betterment of Africa.
Indeed the dawn of the new day is upon us. Let those who have
eyes to see, see and recognize that Africa is on the
move to a better tomorrow. A brighter day has finally arrived.
Contact: Organization of African Unity,
PO Box 3243, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, telephone +251-1/517700, fax
+251-1/512622, website (www.oau-oau)
or African Union, e-mail <tpst@africa-union.org>, website (www.africa-union.org/en/home.asp).
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USCR SAYS NUMBER OF WORLDS UPROOTED GROWING |
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According to a report published by the
United States Committee for Refugees (USCR), refugees worldwide
suffered the repercussions of the events of 11 September 2001.
The US, preoccupied by security concerns in the wake of the attacks
on New York and Washington, temporarily shut down its refugee
resettlement programme on 1 October 2001 and, as a result, admitted
fewer refugees in 2001 than in any year since 1987.
The World Refugee Survey 2002 states that
thousands of refugees in Africa, the Middle East, South Asia and
elsewhere who expected to go to the US became stuck where they
were, often in places where they were at risk. The report also
calls attention to the fact that a number of countries concerned
about security but also responding to growing anti-immigrant sentimenttightened
admissions procedures and criteria for asylum-seekers and immigrants.
For example, the United Kingdom and Germany passed anti-terrorism
laws in late 2001 that curtailed the rights of immigrants and
refugees inside their borders, while Denmark, traditionally welcoming
to asylum-seekers and refugees, drafted some of Europes
toughest asylum regulations in January 2002.
The World Refugee Survey 2002 notes that
worldwide, conflict and human rights abuse brought the total number
of refugees to 14.9 million, the largest number in six years.
More than 22 million people were internally displaced with Afghanistan
producing the largest number of uprooted people in 2001. Some
4.5 million Afghans were refugees in other countries, mostly Pakistan
and Iran, and another one million Afghans were displaced within
Afghanistan. However, the report notes that midway through 2002
more than half a million Afghan refugees had returned, and hundreds
of thousands more appeared willing to return, but international
donors were not keeping pace with the repatriation and reintegration
costs.
Among the newly uprooted were some 1.8
million Africans driven from their homes by war, armed insurgencies,
or violent civil unrest, where massive population displacement
occurred in 19 of the 48 countries in Africa last year. According
to the report, poor funding by donor nations has resulted in harsh
living conditions for millions of uprooted Africans.
Failure of the rich countries of
the north to bear their fair share of the human and financial
cost in assisting and protecting refugees is shortsighted and
likely to multiply future costs, said Bill Frelick, editor
of the report. Whether contributing financially to maintain
refugees in safety and dignity in their places of initial asylum,
providing rescue through resettlement for those still in danger
in the regions of initial flight, or funding sustainable return
and reintegration in places like Bosnia, Sierra Leone, and Afghanistan,
donor countries can do more than simply provide charitythey
can invest in a more stable and secure future for all.
At a time when freedom is under
attack, the world is turning its back on people fleeing war, persecution,
and terror in search of freedom, said USCR Executive Director
Lavinia Limón. This indifference towards refugees undermines
our stated values.
Contact: US Committee for Refugees,
1717 Massachusetts Avenue NW, Washington DC 20036, USA, telephone
+1-202/347 3507, fax +1-202/347 3418, e-mail <uscr@irsa-uscr.org>,
website (www.refugees.org/index.cfm).
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ZIMBABWE INVOKES TRIPS AND HEALTH DECLARATION |
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On 27 May 2002, Zimbabwe became the first
State to declare a national HIV/AIDS emergency, thereby freeing
itself from its obligations to respect relevant HIV/AIDS drug
patents under the World Trade Organization (WTO) Agreement on
Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPs).
The six-month emergency declaration lifts all legal restrictions
that block access to generic medicines.
The government has decided to override
patent protection on antiretrovirals and use genericsthis
means that the price of the first-line AIDS cocktails recommended
by the World Health Organization will plummet from US$1,168 to
US$412, said Carmen Pérez Casas, pharmacist coordinator
at the Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) Access Campaign. Although
prices are just one barrier to overcome to increase access to
antiretrovirals, this measure will allow available resources to
treat more than twice as many patients.
MSF says Zimbabwes announcement
marks the first time that a government has gone beyond using the
threat of compulsory licensing as a negotiating tool, and actually
declared that it will override patents to increase access to needed
medicines when the prices are too high as a result of patent protection.
Zimbabwe doesnt manufacture
antiretrovirals, so it will need to import them from other countries
which produce cheaper generics, said Ellen T Hoen
from MSF. Exporting generics is still permissible for these
countries under international trade regulationsbut this
will change as the TRIPs Agreement is fully implemented in all
WTO members. Unless the TRIPs Council finds a swift and workable
solution to this question of production for export, measures such
as those taken by Zimbabwe to deal with health care needs may
become impossible.
Over 2,000 people die of AIDS every week
in Zimbabwe and life expectancy has dropped to less than 41 years,
compared to 70 years before the epidemic.
Contact: Daniel Berman, Access to Essential
Medicines Campaign, Médecins Sans Frontières, Rue du Lac 12, PO
Box 6090, CH-1211 Geneva 6, Switzerland, telephone +41-22/849
8407, fax +41-22/849 8404, e-mail <daniel_berman@geneva.msf.org>,
website (www.msf.org).
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LATINO FARMWORKERS FACE GREATER CANCER RISK |
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A recent study by the Cancer Registry
of California (US) analyzed cancer incidence among California
Latino farmworkers who had been members of the United Farmworkers
of America (UFW) union. Out of more than 140,000 farmworkers,
the study found that 1,001 had been diagnosed with cancer between
1973 and 1997. Compared with the general Latino population, farmworkers
were more likely to develop certain types of leukemia by 59%,
stomach cancer by 69%, cervical cancer by 63% and uterine cancer
by 68%.
The report says farmworkers are regularly
exposed to pesticides in the following ways:
while mixing or applying them;
during planting, weeding, thinning, irrigating, pruning,
and harvesting crops;
living in or near treated fields; or
eating pesticide contaminated food.
As a result, farmworkers face greater
risk of exposure to hazardous pesticides than any other sector
of society.
Pesticide exposure results in both short-term
acute poisoningsincluding rash, headache, blurred vision,
chest pain, excessive sweating, nausea and vomitingas well
as long-term or chronic illness, such as cancer, birth defects
and other reproductive and developmental problems.
According to the studys co-author
Paul Mills, farmworkers were diagnosed at a later stage than most
of Californias Latinos, which reveals the lack of health
care and education available to most farmworkersa finding
confirmed by a recent study of California farmworker health conducted
by the California Institute for Rural Studies. Many cancers, such
as uterine cancer, are more treatable with early detection.
Although the study doesnt directly
link pesticide use to the higher rates of cancer, the UFW believes
there is a direct relationship between the chemicals and cancer.
The Cancer Registry of California data may actually underestimate
the true incidence among farmworkers since some may have worked
in California but moved away, been diagnosed and treated in Mexico
or never sought medical attention.
Contact: Pesticide Action Network North
America (PANNA), 49 Powell St., Suite 500, San Francisco CA 94102,
USA, telephone +1-415/981 1771, fax +1-415/981 1991, e-mail <panna@panna.org>,
website (www.panna.org). United Farmworkers, National Headquarters,
PO Box 62, Keene, California 93531, USA, e-mail <ufwofamer@aol.com>,
website (www.ufw.org/paper.htm)
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