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92 JUNE-JULY 2002
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WORLD FOOD PROGRAMME SOUNDS THE ALARM
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With southern Africa facing its worst food
crisis in a decade, the UN World Food Programme (WFP) has launched
a massive international appeal to feed millions of hungry people
in six countries. However, unlike the devastating drought of 1991-1992,
a variety of factorsranging from high prevalence rates of
HIV/AIDS infection, to rising levels of poverty and a succession
of poor harvests, to regional economic decline and governmental
mismanagementhas contributed to current food shortages.
WFP is asking for US$507 million to fund
close to one million tonnes of food, enough to feed 10.2 million
people in Zimbabwe, Malawi, Zambia, Mozambique, Lesotho, and Swaziland
until the next main harvest in March 2003. WFPwhich has been
providing emergency food aid in the region since last yearsays
it has only one-quarter of the food it needs for the next three
months. This is WFPs largest emergency operation but
it needs donations to succeed and those donations are needed now,
said WFP Executive Director James T. Morris. Southern Africa
is already facing an extremely severe crisis, which will only worsen
in the coming months. However, it is still possible for the international
community to avert a catastrophe by responding rapidly to this appeal.
WFP says that already, from June to September
2002, seven million people need food aid, rising to just over 11
million from September to November, and peaking at 12.8 million
from December until March 2003. Until now, WFP has been targeting
4.6 million people. Warning that these numbers could easily rise
as the crisis becomes more acute, WFP says the current figures are
based on a number of assumption s on issues such as expected commercial
food imports, effective government agricultural policies, winter
harvest production, and affordable maize supplies.
Democratic Republic of Congo
WFP has announced the resumption of an emergency airlift operation
for thousands of people trapped by war in the Democratic Republic
of Congo (DRC). The operation, WFPs third airlift in eastern
DRC in the last 12 months, allows the agency to transport food aid
to at least 24,000 people in DRCs northern Katanga province
who remain cut off by war. Tens of thousands of people continue
to come out of their hiding places in the woods, attracted by food
distributions provided in nutritional centres, said Felix
Bamezon, WFPs Representative for DRC. The majority of
these people are women and children whose nutritional status is
precarious.
With the farming season currently in progress,
WFP and NGOs plan to also airlift much needed seeds and agricultural
tools to enable families with access to their fields to cultivate
it.>
Angola
WFP has warned that food supplies for post-war Angola are dwindling
precisely at a time when more food is urgently needed for growing
numbers of hungry people. Until recently, hundreds of thousands
of people were completely isolated and inaccessible to humanitarian
agencies due to years of conflict. However, security and access
improved dramatically when a peace agreement was signed on 4 April
2002, ending over 20 years of civil war.
WFP says that many people, especially women
and children, are in extremely poor condition and face starvation
unless food supplies are urgently increased. Over recent weeks,
WFP has started feeding an extra 120,000 desperately hungry people
who were until recently completely cut off from aid due to the war.
The agency says it needs US$241 million to feed up to 1.5 million
people over the next 18 months, and that in spite of its growing
activities in Angola, pledges from international donors have been
sporadic.
Afghanistan
Mr. Morris has urged donors to be as generous as in the past winter
to ensure that urgently needed reconstruction and rehabilitation
efforts can continue and make a difference for the people of Afghanistan.
With all the stocks and pledges WFP has received so far, the food
aid agency still faces a shortage of 175,000 million tonnes of food,
worth approximately US$102 million, and is appealing to donors to
help on a larger scale. Unless we get additional cash immediately,
we could see malnutrition with the risk of starvation rising especially
in the highlands, Mr. Morris said.
About one million refugees returning from
neighbouring countries have also benefited from WFP food support
over the past few months, but due to funding shortages WFP had to
cut down the food package to the returning families to one-third
of the original ration.
Indonesia
WFP has launched a US$65 million relief operation to ease Indonesias
crisis of more than one million internally displaced people now
competing with a growing urban poor underclass for survival. The
WFP operation, running from 1 July to 31 December 2003, intends
to help 2.1 million Indonesians who face the highest risk of hunger
and malnutrition because of the spiralling costs of food, petrol
and other commodities during a period of slow economic recovery.
The operation is designed to solve at
least one problem for these peoplegetting enough to eatso
they can grapple more effectively with serious setbacks of poverty,
unemployment and poor health, said Mohamed Saleheen, WFP Country
Director for Indonesia. We are working with what are called
the ultra poor, a designation which means that they
spend over 75% of their income on food but consume less than 75%
of the minimum daily calorie requirement, he added. It
is a losing battle unless we step in and help fill the food gap
for them.
Noting that wages for unskilled urban labourers
are half what they were before the 1998 economic meltdown, Mr. Saleheen
explained that a large proportion of WFPs target group has
no access to government social safety nets because they are illegal
settlers in a shadow existence on the fringes of the economy.
Contact: Jeff Rowland, Public Affairs
Officer, WFP, Via Cesare Giulio Viola 68, I-00148 Rome, Italy, telephone
+39-06/6513 2971, fax +39-06/6513 2840, e-mail <Jeffrey.Rowland@wfp.org>,
website (www.wfp.org).
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WORLD
FOOD SUMMIT: FIVE YEARS LATER |
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The World Food Summit: five years later
(WFS:fyl) took place at the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)
headquarters in Rome from 10-13 June, where a large number of Heads
of State and Government met to adopt a political declaration reaffirming
the commitment made at the World Food Summit in 1996 to reduce the
number of hungry people in the world by half (from 800 million to
400 million) by 2015.
Introduction
Eighty-two Heads of State or Governments assembled at FAO to participate
in the WFS:fyl. Of these, only two were from the rich industrialized
countriesItalian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi (host country)
and Spanish Prime Minister José María Aznar (Presidency of the European
Union). Altogether some 4,000 representatives from more than 180
countries participated in the Summit, with 301 NGO/CSO representatives
officially accredited to the meeting.
In his opening speech, FAO Director-General
Jacques Diouf called for an International Alliance Against Hunger
to mobilize the political will needed to put the hungry at the centre
of the concerns of governments, parliaments, communities and civil
society.
Also addressing the opening session, UN Secretary-General
Kofi Annan said, Hunger is one of the worst violations of
human dignity. In a world of plenty, ending hunger is within our
grasp. Failure to reach this goal should fill every one of us with
shame. The time for making promises is over. It is time to act.
It is time to do what we have long promised to doeliminate
hunger from the face of the earth.
Negotiations
The negotiations over the Declaration to be adopted at the Summit
took place over the days preceding the event. Despite the initial
intention of not opening up the basic precepts of the 1996 World
Food Summit Declaration, the United States, European Union (EU),
and the Group of 77 (G-77) tabled a large number of proposals and
amendments.
After difficult late-night negotiating sessions,
the main sticking points were a US proposal on the positive role
of biotechnology in the fight against hunger, and an EU proposal
on a Code of Conduct on the Right to Food and the implications of
using the term International Alliance Against Hunger
to connate what had been agreed in Rome.
An initiative by middle-income developing
countries to have their hunger problems specifically recognized
and addressed by the international community did not meet with success.
In the end, after over 80 hours of negotiations, a consensus text
was adopted on the evening before the opening of the Summit on Monday,
10 June.
The Declaration
he Declaration, adopted in the opening plenary session of the meeting,
broadly reconfirms the commitments and actions adopted at the 1996
Summit and recognizes that insufficient progress has been made over
the five years since. Paragraph 3 says, We recognize that
progress had not been adequate to reach the WFS target. Recognizing
that responsibility for assuring national food security rests with
national governments in cooperation with civil society and the private
sector and with the support of the international community, we resolve
to accelerate implementation of action to halve hunger by no later
than 2015. This requires a rate of hunger reduction of more than
22 million per year on average.
The agreed language resulting from the negotiations
on a Code of Conduct on the Right to Food is found in paragraph
10, which says, We invite the FAO Council to establish at
its One Hundred and Twenty-third session an Intergovernmental Working
Group, with the participation of stakeholders, in the context of
the WFS follow-up, to elaborate, in a period of two years, a set
of voluntary guidelines to support Member States efforts to
achieve the progressive realization of the right to adequate food
in the context of national food security; we ask the FAO, in close
collaboration with relevant treaty bodies, agencies and programmes
of the UN system, to assist the Intergovernmental Working Group,
which shall report on its work to the Committee on World Food Security.
With regard to the role of biotechnology in
addressing hunger, paragraph 25 states: We call on the FAO,
in conjunction with the Consultative Group on International Agricultural
Research (CGIAR) and other international research institutes, to
advance agricultural research and research into new technologies,
including biotechnology. The introduction of tried and tested new
technologies including biotechnology should be accomplished in a
safe manner and adapted to local conditions to help improve agricultural
productivity in developing countries. We are committed to study,
share and facilitate the responsible use of biotechnology in addressing
development needs.
The United States lodged a reservation with
regard to the reference to the Right to Food in the Declaration,
on the familiar grounds that it could have legal ramifications under
the US Constitution. The US also made known its interpretation of
the reference to the International Alliance Against Hunger as not
implying the establishment of any new structures or funding.
In the week preceding the Summit, FAO launched
an Anti-Hunger Programme, arguing that to reach the
1996 WFS goals would require additional public investment in agriculture
and rural populations of some US$24 billion per year, a figure strongly
supported by Jeffrey Sachs, Special Advisor to UN Secretary-General
Kofi Annan, who referred to the programme as a business plan for
development assistance and the only realistic chance to reach the
Summits goal.
Conceived as a partnership between developing
and rich countries, US$12.8 billion would be provided by official
development assistance (ODA), and US$11 billion would be provided
by developing countries. While the programme did not receive the
endorsement of the major donor countries, the Summit Declaration,
in paragraph 27, calls upon member countries, intergovernmental
and non-governmental organizations, the private sector and others
to consider voluntary contributions to FAOs Trust Fund for
Food Security and Food Safety, established in July 2001, with a
target of US$500 million and to which Italy has contributed US$47
million.
Coming as it did just a few weeks after the
United States Government announced a new farm bill that will provide
US$180 billion in support to US farmers over the next ten years,
developing countries, members of the Cairns Group, and the EU took
the opportunity to broadly criticize the US for going back on commitments
to liberalize made at the World Trade Organization (WTO) Ministerial
meeting in Doha last November.
During the four days of the meeting, the US
and EU delegations took every opportunity to denounce each others
agricultural policies and defend their own, and also sought to outdo
each other on their generosity as aid donors. Some of the African
leaders present at the meeting took the opportunity to promote the
New Economic Partnership for Africas Development (NEPAD).
Non-governmental and other participants held
a series of side events at FAO headquarters over the four days of
the Summit. CGIAR held a seminar in the presence of Norman Borlaug,
the so-called father of the Green Revolution, which firmly endorsed
biotechnological approaches to increasing agricultural production.
On the third day a multistakeholder dialogue
was held, a first for FAO. A great majority of the interventions
were made by NGOs/CSOs with rather few from governments despite
the encouragement of the co-chairs, Norwegian Minister for International
Development Hilde Johnson, and Sorojeni Rengam of Pesticide Action
Network. In one moving testimony, a woman from the Korean consumer
movement explained how she had unknowingly fed genetically modified
food to her children and how ashamed it had made her feel. Addressing
the US delegation she asked why, if genetically modified foods were
safe, was there opposition to labelling them as such.
NGO/CSO Forum
The NGO/CSO Forum on Food Sovereignty was held across town from
FAO in the Palazzo dei Congressi, where the 1974 World Food Conference
took place, when world leaders pledged to abolish hunger in ten
years. Over 700 participants took part in the Forum, organized by
an International Planning Committee (IPC) and an Italian Host Committee
(see NGLS
Roundup 86). On the Saturday prior to the Summit,
some 20,000 people took part in a peaceful march through the streets
of Rome on the theme Land and Dignity.
The main sub-theme of the Forum was hunger
is not a problem of means but of rights, under which banner
the Forum discussed the impact of world trade patterns on food sovereignty;
the object of having the Right to Food enshrined in international
law; and the need to increase recognition and support for ecological
approaches to agriculture.
The Forum comprised two segments. An official
segment comprised some 500 representatives of social movements,
farmer and fisher organizations, and other NGOs from developing
country regions, who had met together at the regional level during
the preparatory process for WFS:fyl. The organizers had identified
450 participants from developing countries and 150 from the OECD
region, although a large number of developing country representatives
failed to show, due to visa problems, according to the
organizers.
The other NGOs/CSOs present were able to organize
workshops and other thematic and regional meetings on issues such
as genetically modified organisms (GMOs), the WTO, NEPAD, organic
agriculture, etc. Participants who had been present at the fourth
Preparatory Committee for the World Summit on Sustainable Development
(WSSD) in Bali (Indonesia) from 27 May-7 June, made linkages between
the two processes.
FAO, the World Food Programme (WFP), and the
International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) also held
a number of briefings and information sessions each day at the Forum.
In its Declaration to the Plenary of the WFS:fyl,
the NGO Forum expressed its collective disappointment in,
and rejection of, the official Declaration of the World Food Summit:
five years later. Far from analyzing and correcting the problems
that have made it impossible to make progress over the past five
years toward eliminating hunger, this new plan of action compounds
the error of more of the same failed medicine with destructive
prescriptions that will make the situation even worse.
NGO and civil society activists were particularly
concerned by the uncritical and non-precautionary embrace of biotechnology
in the document, the lack of mention of alternative, ecological
approaches to raising agricultural production, and the weakening
of the language on a Code of Conductalthough NGOs are committed
to monitoring and lobbying the two-year process to establish the
voluntary guidelines agreed at the Summit.
The NGO Forum also adopted a plan of action,
Food Sovereignty: An Action Agenda with over 130 proposals for action
in the coming years. In the final meeting of the IPC, it was agreed
to maintain and build on the regional focal point system created
in the preparation for the Forum and maintain a coordinating presence
in Rome to interface with the Rome-based UN food agencies.
Contact: Nora McKeon, Resources and Strategic
Partnerships Unit, Food and Agriculture Organization, Viale delle
Terme di Caracalla, I-00100 Rome, Italy, telephone +39-06/5705 3852,
fax +39-06/5705 5175, e-mail <TCDS-NGOs-CSOs@fao.org>, website
(www.fao.org/tc/NGO).
International Focal Point: Antonio Onorati,
Coordinator, Associazione ONG Italiane (Italian Host Committee),
Via Angelo di Pietro 21, I-00165, Rome, Italy, telephone +39-06/3937
7764, fax +39-06/3937 7758, e-mail <ngoforum@libero.it>, website
(www.forumfoodsovereignty.org).
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UNCTAD PROPOSES
ALTERNATIVE APPROACH TO POVERTY REDUCTION
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Where extreme poverty is as pervasive as
it is in most least developed countries (LDCs), poverty reduction
strategies should not target only the poorest but seek to raise
living standards for the majority through development. This is one
of the key messages of the UN Conference on Trade and Development
(UNCTAD) in its Least Developed Countries Report, 2002, which proposes
an alternative to the prevailing approach, one that addresses broader
structural problems, including what it defines as the international
poverty trap.
Over a billion people, including at least
two-thirds of those in the 49 least developed countries (LDCs),
are currently taking part in a massive social experiment, UNCTAD
says. Their governments are preparing and implementing Poverty Reduction
Strategy Papers (PRSPs) as a condition for aid and debt relief.
How this experiment works in practice will be critical for the lives
of at least one billion people and for achieving the global poverty
reduction goals agreed by the international community.
The PRSP process is the centrepiece of the
approach to international development cooperation for low-income
countries introduced in the late 1990s by the International Monetary
Fund (IMF) and World Bank. The UNCTAD report argues that the central
insight of the PRSP approachthat more effective poverty reduction
will come not from national policies imposed by donors but from
allowing countries to formulate and implement their own policiesis
the right one.
It also agrees with the key judgement underlying
the shift in international development cooperation, which is that
the structural adjustment programmes (SAPs) of the 1980s and 1990s
were not doing enough to reduce poverty in poor countries. Using
a new set of poverty estimates, the report shows that on average
the incidence of extreme poverty did not fall in LDCs undertaking
SAPs, even in the group of countries where they were well implemented.
Where productive capacities, markets and an entrepreneurial class
investing in production are all underdeveloped, SAPs do not deliver
accelerated and sustained economic growth at rates sufficient to
make a significant dent in poverty.
However, the initial experience with PRSPs
in the LDCs shows that the creative potential of the new approach
is not being realized, according to the report. Like the old adjustment
programmes, the emerging PRSPs still give priority to short-term
stabilization over long-term development, with tight credit ceilings
and restrictive fiscal policies.
They continue to broaden and deepen past structural
reforms in the belief that an economy where four out of five people
are living on US$1 a day will behave like a perfectly competitive
market, and economic activities will automatically spring up if
the government gets out of the way and the national market
opens up to the rest of the world.
Although there is one new anti-poverty componentmore
closely tracked public expenditure being channelled into basic health,
education and local infrastructure projectsthe overall approach,
says UNCTAD, is still not the best way to combat poverty in the
LDCs. In fact, there is a possibility that with these new
strategies, countries will end up with the worst of all worlds.
The new policies will increase exposure to intensely competitive
global markets but without facilitating the development of the productive
and supply capacities necessary to compete. At the same time, there
will be increased aid dependence through arms-length international
guidance of social welfare.
Genuine National Ownership and Policy
Autonomy
UNCTAD contends that through the PRSP approach it should be possible
to promote more effective poverty reduction in the LDCs than in
the past. But this is not happening now, as governments are reluctant
to move beyond adjustment. Their dilemma is that their PRSPs still
have to be endorsed as satisfactory by the IMF and World Bank to
be eligible for concessional aid and debt relief.
The report notes that developing country governments
know from past experience that if there are interruptions in aid
flows and delays in debt relief, the incidence of poverty is bound
to rise. Therefore, realizing the full potential of the PRSP approach
will require fewer and more flexible conditionalities, as well as
greater open-mindedness on the part of international financial institutions
to alternative poverty reduction strategies, with donors firmly
aligned behind those strategies.
The report advocates the introduction of donor
performance-monitoring indicators at the recipient country level
to provide incentives for, and monitor progress towards, increased
ownership and partnership, and thereby aid effectiveness. Rebuilding
key State capacitiesparticularly in such areas as financial
auditing and accounting, economic forecasting and debt managementis
also essential.
An Alternative Approach
With genuine national ownership and policy autonomy, a greater variety
of poverty reduction strategies can emerge. But a key question is
whether there is a credible alternative. UNCTAD argues that the
best way to move beyond adjustment now is by anchoring poverty reduction
strategies in long-term development strategies. Priority policy
actions over a three-year time span in the PRSP would be derived
from the overall development strategy, representing the steps taken
in the short-term in support of the realization of the strategy.
The overall goal should be to promote sustained
economic growth in order to double average household living standards;
if this happens, the incidence of extreme poverty will then fall
sharply. This doubling will be best achieved through mutually interacting
investment and export growth that expands productive capacities
and generates sustainable livelihoods.
UNCTADs alternative approach builds
on earlier research on the policies that facilitated sustained economic
growth over a long period in East Asia and how these policies can
be applied in sub-Saharan Africa. The approach is based on establishing
a dynamic investment-export nexus through the creation of profitable
investment opportunities, reducing the risks and uncertainty of
investment activity, and ensuring the availability of finance so
that entrepreneurs are able to invest in expanding production. Key
elements of the approach are more growth-oriented macro-economic
policies, sectorally focused productive development policies, export
promotion policies and policies to ensure that marginalization within
LDCs does not occur as economic growth takes place.
Private enterprise has a leading role to play
in development-oriented poverty reduction strategies, the report
says. But the development process should be catalyzed and guided
by a developmental State that, through effective governance of markets,
harnesses the profit motive for the purposes of national development
and poverty reduction. Creating effective States, and also a dynamic
domestic entrepreneurial class willing to commit its resources to
domestic investment rather than to luxury consumption or holding
wealth abroad, remains a central institutional issue.
The International Poverty Trap
An implicit assumption of the PRSP approach is that global poverty
reduction goals can be achieved with national poverty reduction
means alone. The report recognizes that without the right national
policies and responsible government, effective poverty reduction
in LDCs is impossible. But responsibility without the freedom to
act independently and without the resources to achieve agreed targets
will prove ineffective in reducing poverty, the report says, and
will ultimately lead to crises of legitimacy. However well-designed
domestic policies may be, it says, in the current era of globalization
they will be ineffective without a supportive international environment.
It is the interrelationship between perverse domestic and external
cause-and-effect relationships, together with the interdependence
between trade and finance, which create what the report defines
as the international poverty trap.
At the domestic level, five main interrelationships
are identified in the report:
Domestic resources available to finance physical and human
capital investment and productivity growth are low owing to generalized
poverty.
State capacities are weak as all activities, including administration
and law and order, are under-funded.
Domestic corporate capacities in business, finance and support
services are weak, even though there may be a thriving informal
sector.
Generalized poverty engenders rapid population growth and
environmental degradation.
In a situation of generalized poverty, the probability of
political instability and conflict is greater. All these factors
serve to reinforce generalized poverty directly and indirectly.
Generalized poverty in turn results in low savings and investment,
and low productivityso the vicious circle continues. At the
international level, three main interrelationships are identified:
The build-up of unsustainable external debt
The emergence of a perverse aid/debt system;
Primary commodity dependence in a context of a persistent
decline and instability in world prices.
The report emphasizes the need for increased
and accelerated debt relief delivered through a simpler mechanism
than the current enhanced Highly Indebted Poor Countries Initiative
(HIPC II). Under HIPC II, the annual debt service relief in 2003-2005
for the 20 LDCs that have qualified for debt relief will be only
5.5% of net official development assistance (ODA) disbursements
to those countries in the year 2000. The forecasts of a sustainable
exit from the debt problem through the Initiative are systematically
and simplistically overoptimistic, UNCTAD argues. With falling commodity
prices, the enhanced HIPC Initiative is on a knife-edge, and the
fledgling PRSPs will be derailed if debts and arrears accumulate
again.
Unsustainable external debt also undermines
aid effectiveness, the report finds. There is now clear evidence
that the build-up of external debt has influenced donor behaviour,
it says. Official donors, who are also the major creditors,
have been supplying aid to ensure that official debts can be serviced.
There is an urgent need for increased and
more effective aid. The report notes that it is a positive sign
that the sharp decline in aid flows to the LDCs that began at the
start of the 1990s was halted during 1998-2000. But in real per
capita terms, net ODA disbursements to the LDCs were still 46% lower
in 2000 than they were in 1990. The poverty-reducing impact of relaxing,
to different degrees, the financial constraint within which PRSPs
are framed should be jointly explored by developing country governments
and donors.
Productive sectors, notably agriculture, and
economic infrastructure, which have both been relatively neglected
in the context of declining aid flows, are likely to receive greater
attention in the type of poverty reduction strategy advocated by
UNCTAD. Aid effectiveness will be greatly increased if aid inflows
are geared to government priorities, delivered through government
systems unless there are compelling reasons to the contrary, and
provided on a more stable, long-term basis.
International Commodity Policy
The type of export in which LDCs specialize makes a big difference
in their economic success and patterns of poverty, the report finds,
noting that primary commodity exporters are being left the farthest
behind in global development. In 1997-1999, 79% of the people living
on less than US$1 a day in the LDCs were living in these countries.
The ability of international trade to act
as an engine of growth and poverty reduction is being
short-circuited by a persistent fall and instability of world commodity
prices, the report points out. At the end of 2001, real non-fuel
commodity prices had plunged to one-half of their annual average
for the period 1979-1981.
The report reviews past efforts to mitigate
excessive instability through economic measures in international
commodity agreements (ICAs), which it says have been successful
only for limited periods of time. In view of this mixed record and
the lack of political will to implement such economic measures,
the report suggests that their reintroduction into ICAs appears
unlikely. One possible approach, UNCTAD suggests, is the promotion
of arrangements between buyers and sellers that are based on longer-term
commitments rather than on daily dealings. All parties must
accept, however, that attaining some degree of stability may mean
forgoing short-term gains, UNCTAD stresses.
The introduction of at least some aspects
of fair trade principles into mainstream trade may be
an avenue to explore in this regard. But for this to happen, incentives
need to be provided by governments and cooperation between the NGO
community and large business concerns must exist. The report cites
a joint UNCTAD/International Development Research Centre project
that is exploring modalities in this area, with an initial focus
on coffee. It notes that some firms, such as Starbucks, have already
decided to procure part of their supplies under fair trade
arrangements, and the marketing of Max Havelaar products through
the Migros supermarket chain in Switzerland has been a determining
factor in achieving significant market shares, notably in bananas.
The report also refers to price risk management
financial instruments as a way to limit the incidence of instability
for producers and trades, but warns that ongoing application of
these instruments in some LDCs is likely to reveal both the problems
and the potential of this approach.
The report emphasizes that the international
community, in discussing a new developmental approach to international
commodity policy, must reconsider the use of compensatory financing
for export earnings shortfalls. This is a particularly important
aspect in addressing what the 2001 UN Programme of Action for the
Least Developed Countries (paragraph 86) calls the structural
causes of indebtedness. In this regard, the report notes that
the IMF contingency credit line would not be available to a country
that is borrowing from any other IMF facility, while the costs of
accessing the IMF Compensatory Financing Facility are so prohibitive
that they would breach the standard concessional borrowing ceilings
in Poverty Reduction Growth Facility programmes.
It goes on to review the European Unions
so-called B envelope funding, designed to replace its
STABEX and SYSMIN (the ECs compensatory finance scheme to
stabilize export earnings of the African, Caribbean, and Pacific
group of States for agricultural goods and the mining sector) and
export shortfall compensation windows. While B envelope funding
is more flexible, the terms governing access to this finance are
very restrictive, requiring shocks equivalent to a 10% drop in export
earnings as well as a 10% worsening of the budget deficit. The
design of appropriate contingency financing facilities for LDCs
and other low-income countries is urgent, UNCTAD insists.
In terms of the causes of long-term decline
in world primary commodity prices, the report cites improvements
in yields and productivity (the benefits of which have largely accrued
to buyers), and the entry of new producers into primary commodity
markets.
The report highlights strategies that could
help producers in capturing more of the benefits of yield and productivity
improvements. It also suggests that international commodity policy
should include modalities for regular consultations among international
organizations, including international commodity bodies, and governments,
designed to help in directing efforts to increase production away
from crowded markets to more dynamic products.
Contact: Charles Gore, Senior Economic
Affairs Officer, Office of the Special Coordinator for LDCs, UNCTAD,
Palais des Nations, CH-1211 Geneva 10, Switzerland, telephone +41-22/917
5944, fax +41-22/917 0046, e-mail <charles.gore@unctad.org>,
website (www.unctad.org).
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ECOSOC HIGH LEVEL SEGMENT ON EDUCATION AND HEALTH CARE
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The UN Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC)
opened its annual substantive session with a high-level segment
where top Member State officials, heads of international agencies
and other senior UN officials addressed the segments main
themeseducation and health caretermed the surest
antidote to strife and the strongest foundation for long-term economic
growth, by ECOSOC President Ivan Simonovic (Croatia).
At the meeting, held from 1-3 July 2002 at
UN headquarters in New York, Ministerial participants concentrated
their discussion on the contribution of human resources development
to the process of development, and concluded the high-level segment
with the adoption of a Ministerial Declaration on the subject. Many
embraced the implementation of the Millennium Declaration as the
central organizing framework for their development efforts and recognized
that a funding gap needed to be closed in order to meet the targets.
United States Treasury Secretary Paul ONeill,
recently back from his tour of Africa with activist rock star Bono,
highlighted three investments that he said were vital to realizing
human potential and making an immediate difference in peoples
lives: clean water, primary education, and fighting HIV/AIDS. He
said that the US was increasing its contributions largely through
the Millennium Challenge Account, which was launched during the
International Conference on Financing for Development (ICFFD) held
in Monterrey (Mexico) in March 2002 (see NGLS Roundup 91). Mr. ONeill
noted that the Account represented a 50% increase over the next
three years in US official development assistance (ODA) and was
being used to assist countries that govern justly, invest
in people and encourage economic freedom.
Mr. ONeill echoed Mr. Simonovics
comments regarding the need for investment in impoverished countries
through grants. We must avoid creating the next generation
of highly indebted poor countries, Mr. ONeill said.
The reality is that essential investments in sectors such
as education and health care cannot directly generate the revenue
to service new debt. These projects should be funded by grants,
not loans.
Rubens Ricupero, Secretary-General of the
United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), delivered
a withering critique of the international response to the spread
of economic instability, particularly in Latin America, noting that
even after several episodes of painful crises in emerging markets,
the international community still lacked a realistic strategy for
dealing with financial instability and the debt problem. Just muddling
through had cost Latin America the entire decade of the 1980s,
he said, and a similar lack of procedures had recently exposed Argentina.
Uncertainty, he noted, continued to surround the modalities of official
intervention in the financial crisis, adding to the overall volatility.
It was time to end ad hoc approaches, Mr. Ricupero said, and get
on with genuine reform of the international financial architecture.
Only multilateral action could effectively deal with the debt problem
and only cooperation among the major economic powers could deliver
the degree of currency stability needed by developing countries
to ensure that trade and financial flows complemented their domestic
efforts.
Stressing that trade had always been one of the channels for transmitting
recessions in the industrial countries to the developing countriesas
was the case in 2001Mr. Ricupero further emphasized the need
for a strong multilateral trading system and the successful delivery
of the Doha promises to inject as much growth and development potential
as possible into the negotiations. Mr. Ricupero noted that the international
development community had been distressed by the recent threats
to those promises, apparently arising from a series of protectionist
measures. He called on all countries to resist protectionism, but
emphasized that it was only the major trading powers that could
make a difference by exercising responsible leadership.
NGO Input
Mr. Simonovic attempted to enhance the participation and effective
involvement of all stakeholders, including civil society in this
years session. NGOs were invited to participate fully in the
policy dialogue with the international financial and trade institutions,
the panel discussions, high-level roundtables and the Ministerial
Roundtable breakfasts.
Two weeks prior to the high-level segment,
the Conference of NGOs in Consultative Status with the UN (CONGO)
collaborated with the ECOSOC Secretariat to coordinate an NGO
Forum that consisted of a panel and a workshop to discuss
input for the Ministerial Declaration. The first recommendation
made by the Forum was that the gender aspects of human resources
development needed more attention, as investments in girls
education and health had a long-lasting and mutually reinforcing
impact on poverty reduction. The Forum also suggested that all types
of educationformal, informal and non-formalneeded to
be considered in this connection and that each should be relevant
for employment. In the area of health, NGOs applauded the new Global
Fund to Fight HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria but urged that
more financing be committed to it. NGOs also highlighted the need
to build up infrastructures for health care, safe water supply,
sanitation and waste disposal, to help prevent avoidable diseases.
The Forum additionally called on the Bretton Woods institutions
to prioritize capacity building, education and job creation in their
financial assistance.
Regarding their evolving relationship with
ECOSOC, NGOs said they appreciated being able to make direct input
to the high-level meeting and expressed a desire to be more involved
in the monitoring and evaluation of progress on health and education
targets and work related to the Millennium Development Goals.
Contact: Division for ECOSOC Support and
Coordination, United Nations, Room DC1-1428, New York NY 10017,
USA, telephone +1-212/963 3068, fax +1-212/963 1712, e-mail <lehtinen@un.org>,
website (www.un.org/esa/coordination/ecosoc).
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G-8
SUMMIT ADDRESSES AFRICAN DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE |
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Leaders of the Group of Eight (G-8) most industrialized
countries held their annual summit from 26-27 June 2002 in the resort
of Kananaskis, Alberta (Canada). Although nearly overshadowed by
discussion about conflict hot spots, anti-terrorism
issues, and industry and farm subsidies, aid to Africa did prove
to be a major focus of discussion, as promised by Canadian Prime
Minister Jean Chrétien.
In the first appearance by African leaders
at a G-8 meeting, Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika, Nigerian
President Olusegun Obasanjo, Senegalese President Abdoulaye Wade
and South African President Thabo Mbeki, as well as UN Secretary-General
Kofi Annan met with G-8 leaders to discuss development assistance
to Africa.
The New Partnership for Africas Development
(NEPAD) provided the focus for the summit discussions. NEPAD, an
action plan devised by the African leaders and based on partnership,
calls for US$64 billion in annual investment and support to sustain
an economic growth rate of 7% for 15 years in conformity with goals
set by northern institutions on poverty reduction, education, health
and sustainable development. It also creates a peer-review mechanism,
under which African countries would monitor each others progress.
Among the G-8 countries, Canada and the United
Kingdom led the fight for more aid to Africa, with Mr. Chrétien
calling on G-8 countries to reduce trade barriers to African farm
products, textiles and footwear, and pushing for increased support
for education, agriculture, fresh water, government and judicial
restructuring, foreign investment, and the fight against HIV/AIDS
and malaria. British Prime Minister Tony Blair pushed for more trade
access and debt relief, pledging to increase British aid to the
region to over US$1.5 billion by 2006.
Mr. Chrétien was unable to secure agreement
on getting half of the US$12 billion pledged by G-8 countries earlier
this year to be devoted to Africa. Although Canada and European
countries agreed to the US$6 billion target, Japan and the US refused
to commit themselves. G-8 countries also only offered vague assurances
they would reduce subsidies for their farmers, which African leaders
have complained reduces the competitiveness of their agricultural
exports.
Promising a new beginning for
Africa, G-8 leaders ultimately signed a historic action plan backing
NEPAD and increasing aid to the continent by billions of dollars.
In addition, the G-8 approved US$1 billion in debt relief for as
many as 22 African countries under the World Banks Heavily
Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) initiative.
Activists criticized the move as insufficient,
however, with some NGOs saying the amount barely countered a fall
in prices of commodities such as coffee and cotton, vital to developing
countries. Andrew Graham, a spokesman for CARE Canada, said the
US$1 billion represented only 50 days of debt repayment by poor
countries. Poverty is killing more people every day than terrorism,
Mr. Graham added.
We have acted collectively to make sure
globalization benefits all and no nation is left behind, Mr.
Annan said as he welcomed the plan. If Africans really stick
to the commitments they have made in NEPAD to themselves, and to
each other, and if the G-8 really carry out the action plan they
are announcing today, this summit might come to be seen as a turning
point in the history of Africa, and indeed of the world, he
said.
In the view of many NGOs, however, the G-8
leaders are simply unleashing more of the conditions that have spawned
economic regression in Africa. Isnt it amazing that
a few African countries sat down and mapped out a future for Africa
that looks exactly like structural adjustment programmes of the
World Bank and International Monetary Fund and the World Trade Organization,
to be presented to the rich nations? asked Njoki Njehu of
the anti-poverty campaign 50 Years is Enough Network
in an interview with InterPress. To critics like Ms. Njehu, NEPAD
allows the G-8 to place the responsibility for Africas future
on Africa itself and to thereby evade responsibility for an international
system that plunged the continent into deep poverty in the first
place.
Critics also expressed dismay at what they
saw as NEPADs reinforcement of the notion that the North has
a monopoly on monitoring or certifying progressor its lackin
the South. Even the peer review mechanism, they said, would ultimately
report to northern financial institutions and donor governments
in order for them to disburse aid and loans.
It is an identical blueprint and has
all the components of economic restructuring, privatization, and
trade programmes pushed in other arenas through structural adjustment
programmes by the multilateral financial institutions, Ms.
Njehu told InterPress. This shows the lie and the hypocrisy
in saying that this is an African-owned thing. It is neither something
that comes from the grassroots nor is it something that is organically
African.
Contact: The 2002 Summit, Department
of Foreign Affairs and International Trade, G8 Summit Management
Office (G8C), 125 Sussex Drive, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K1A 0G2,
telephone +1-888/316 2002, website (www.g8.gc.ca/menu-e.asp).
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INDEPENDENT
PANEL URGES UNITED NATIONS TO SUPPORT NEPAD
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After surveying another decade
(1991-2001) of what it calls poor economic performance in Africa,
an independent panel of 12 eminent personalities, named by UN Secretary-General
Kofi Annan and chaired by Ghanas former Finance Minister Kwesi
Botchwey, has found that Africa has made some impressive strides in
democratization in recent years, but also says that a sharp drop in
development aid, unfavourable markets for African exports, devastating
conflicts and continuing poor governance have greatly hindered progress.
The panel found that economic growth in Africa
for the decade of the 1990s averaged only about 3%, down from the
6% target set in 1991 by the now-concluded United Nations New Agenda
for the Development of Africa (UN-NADAF)created to serve as
a catalyst for Africas development in the 1990s. The panel
also found that official development assistance (ODA) to Africa
fell from US$28.6 billion in 1990 to US$16.4 billion in 2000, a
43% decrease.
Other factors affecting Africas economic
growth during the UN-NADAF period were the proliferation of wars
and civil strife; the spread of major diseases, especially HIV/AIDS;
structural adjustment programmesalthough liberalization, privatization
and market-based reforms were believed to have helped improve the
macro-economic situation in Africa somewhat; and the low representation
of women in parliaments and decision-making bodies, among other
factors.
Mandated to consider whether the UN should
develop another agenda or programme to extend or follow UN-NADAF,
it concluded that recent international agreements to promote peace
and development in Africa have essentially failed, while noting
that some 80 million more Africans live in poverty today than at
the start of the 1990s.
The panel has recommended that the United
Nations put its support behind African leaders new initiative,
NEPAD, which focuses on issue around democratization, infrastructure
development and investment. The panel noted that, however, that
NEPAD is still an evolving process, and said that greater
consensus needs to be achieved on NEPADs priorities through
intensive engagement with African democratic institutions and civil
society.
The panel added, NEPADs potential
also reflects its fragility. While an African initiative, NEPADs
charter also candidly acknowledges its substantial dependence on
external assistance in order to realize many of its aspirations.
Donors, from whom such assistance is sought, would need to play
their partnership role in the NEPAD framework with a renewed commitment
to the assurance of African leadership and the avoidance of a return
to old-style conditionality that has been counterproductive in the
past. For NEPAD and other efforts to have greater success
in the future, the panel argued, rich countries need to increase
their aid commitments, provide greater debt relief and open their
markets to African exports.
The panel cited lessons learned that point
to the conditions for success in the future as including: African
ownership, where each African country must evolve its own
development strategy; and peace efforts, which must
be the primary responsibility and highest priority of African countries,
individually and collectively.
Contact: Wiseman Nkuhlu, NEPAD Steering
Committee Chairman, NEPAD Secretariat, PO Box 1234, Midrand Halfway
House, Midrand 1685, South Africa, telephone +27-11/313 3672, fax
+27-11/313 3684, e-mail <wiseman@sbsa.org>, website (www.nepad.org).
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CIVIL SOCIETY AND THE G-8 |
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A significant step was taken by the Canadian
Government in preparation for the Kananaskis Summit, when it undertook
a wide range of outreach activities and consultations with interested
citizens and groups in an effort to make the G-8 Summit process
and priorities more transparent.
Among the major events was a meeting coordinated
by the Montreal International Forum (FIM), held in Montreal and
Ottawa from 21-23 May 2002 with assistance from the Ford Foundation.
FIM is a global alliance of individuals and organizations with the
goal of improving the influence of international civil society on
the UN and the multilateral system. In convening this meeting, FIM
sought to concentrate on the means of improving the process of dialogue
between civil society and the G8, recognizing that it was a long-term
process and at the same time emphasizing that it did not wish to
confer legitimacy upon the G-8 as a global governance mechanism."
Some 15 participants from around the world
were invited in their personal capacity and on the basis of their
knowledge and experience with international civil society dealings
with multilateral bodies. They met with G-8 government representatives
and officials from the G-8 Summit policy office, presenting a history
of multistakeholder dialogues as well as African perspectives on
the NEPAD experience, with special attention given to the role to
date of African civil society.
The participants delivered a blistering critique
of the NEPAD consultative process, noting that it did not have wide
African support, nor was it a one-time opportunity. It is
seriously flawed, they said, with a total lack of gender
analysis. Its underlying macro-economic framework has been put into
question, and its resource mobilization strategy may well be unworkable.
The NEPAD process needs to be opened up, they said.
With regard to future G-8 civil society dialogue,
participants emphasized the underlying principles of good governance,
transparency and legitimacy. The G-8 cannot continue to hide
from its constituents, they said.
Contact: Forum International de Montréal,
407 rue McGill, Bureau 800, Montreal, Quebec H27 2G3, Canada, telephone
+1-514/499 9468, fax +1-514/987 1567, e-mail <info@fimcivilsociety.org>,
website (www.fimcivilsociety.org).
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ILO HOLDS 90TH
LABOUR CONFERENCE
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The International Labour Organization (ILO)
concluded its 90th annual International Labour Conference after
adopting measures designed to promote a more rigorous approach to
meet the challenges of globalization and to create a wider base
for personal security through poverty reduction, job creation and
improved workplace health and safety.
ILOs annual Conference, held from 3-20
June 2002 in Geneva, brought together governments, workers and employers
representing ILOs 175 Member States in order to adopt and
oversee compliance with international labour standards, establish
the budget of the ILO, and elect members of the Governing Body.
The Conference elected Jean-Jacques Elmiger, Secretary of State
of the Federal Department of the Economy of Switzerland, as its
President.
ILO Director-General Juan Somavía said this
years Conference was marked by an exceptionally rich
discussion surrounding globalization, child labour and other issues
and saw a broad and steadily deepening consensus over the
goal of decent work for all. Mr. Somavía stressed, Until
we see a globalization that prioritizes the creation of employment
and the reduction of poverty, the whole concept is going to remain
dogged by controversy and division.
The Conference also considered a wide range
of issues, including decent work in the informal economy, child
labour, safety and health, and the situation of workers in the occupied
Arab territories.
Globalization
Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Bin Mohamad, and Owen Arthur,
Prime Minister of Barbados, addressed the issue of globalization
during the Conference. Mr. Mahathir said that globalization in its
actual form cannot be the remedy for the social ills of the
world and called for globalization with a social dimension.
Mr. Arthur condemned the linkage of labour standards and trade as
immoral and counterproductive and said the ILO must
have more clout in the formulating of global, financial and trade
policy and not just an advisory role.
Speaking on globalization, the Director-General
said the world was experiencing a yawning decent work deficit,
with more than a billion women and men unemployed, some 120 million
migrants seeking work abroad, and that an estimated 500 million
news jobs will be needed over the next decade to absorb new entrants
to the labour market, largely youth and women. The present
form of globalization has not produced enough jobs for all who seek
them or in the places where they are most needed, he said.
This is probably its biggest failure.
Mr. Somavía proposed a five-point plan aimed
at combining public and private policies to address the work deficit,
including: promoting local development, markets, entrepreneurship,
social protection and coping capacity; releasing the creative potential
of women and men trapped in the informal economy; enhancing basic
economic and social security for all people and their families;
promoting policy coherence and pluralism on economic reform, reducing
poverty and job creation; and maintaining a rhythm of change
at the ILO by listening to a wide range of opinions: from
those who like our work and also from our critics.
The Conference also adopted a Recommendation
on the Promotion of Cooperatives, which replaces ILO Recommendation
127 adopted in 1966, which was limited to developing countries.
The Recommendation asks members to adopt measures to promote cooperatives
in all countries to create employment, develop their business potential,
increase savings and investment, and improve social wellbeing. Members
are asked to consider the promotion of cooperatives as one of the
objectives of national and social development, and to reflect on
measures to create an enabling environment to promote the growth
of economically viable and democratically managed cooperatives.
ILO says that cooperatives are one of the
most powerful tools to fight social exclusion and to further sustainable
development. Ivano Barberini, President of the International Co-operative
Alliance, stressed cooperatives are a form of enterprise that
put people first. Ranging from small-scale to multimillion-dollar
businesses across the globe, cooperatives are estimated to employ
more than 100 million women and men, and have more than 800 million
individual members. In his concluding remarks, the Director-General
noted that delegates had urged the ILO to set increasingly
rigorous performance indicators that relate to the needs of constituents
and be more aggressive in evaluating how our intervention can best
help to redress decent work deficits in a globalizing world.
Informal Economy
In an effort to address the issue of making decent work a reality
for the hundreds of millions of people struggling to earn a living
in the informal economy, the Conference held lengthy and often intense
discussions. According to ILO, the magnitude of the informal sector
is huge, involving half to three-quarters of workers in developing
countries: 72% in sub-Saharan Africa, 65% in Asia, 51% in Latin
America and 48% in North Africa.
ILO says there is great difficulty in defining
the term informal economy. In principle, the term refers
to all activities of workers and economic units that are in
law or in practice not covered by formal arrangements,
operating outside of the scope of the law. In some countries the
term refers to the private sector, while in others it is another
name for the underground or shadow economy,
even if the workers in the informal economy produce legal goods
and services. There is also an area between the two where economic
activity involves characteristics of both the formal and informal
economy, for instance when formal workers receive undeclared remuneration.
According to experts at the Conference,
the growth of the informal economy is more a result of poor governance
than of globalization, which they attribute to inappropriate,
ineffective, misguided or badly implemented macro-economic and social
policies. ILO says that in order to reduce the informal economy,
it is essential that structural adjustment, restructuring and privatization
policies take into account the need to promote employment creation.
ILO warns that the multitudes of workers in
this category are not recognized, registered, protected by legislation,
or covered by social security. The absence of health and safety
guarantees, as well as low and irregular incomes for long hours
of work, place workers in a situation of varying degrees of dependency,
leaving them vulnerable to harassment, including sexual harassment
of women, and various forms of exploitation and abuse, such as corruption
and bribery.
The Conference adopted a call for a new ILO
programme of work that would focus on the issues of employment generation,
social protection and poverty reduction for those in the informal
economy. The new programme is intended to provide a roadmap for
future ILO activities aimed at extending rights to those who need
them and access to the benefits of labour standards and the global
economy.
Child Labour
According to ILO figures, nearly 250 million child labourers work
worldwide. Referring to ILOs Global Report A Future without
Child Labour (see Go Between 91), which analyzes the scale and nature
of the problem, a number of speakers at the Conference expressed
their concern, especially for children engaged in the worst forms
of child labour, and called for comprehensive and urgent action
to guide these children out of the workplace and into school.
Turkish Minister Yasar Okuyan stressed, When children are
exploited through labour, an important potential of the country
is lost. A plan of action that will build on reinforcing the
International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour (IPEC),
mainstreaming the effective abolition of child labour in the Decent
Work Agenda, and forging stronger partnerships and alliances for
the elimination of child labour is underway, and will be submitted
to the Governing Body at its 285th Session in November 2002.
The plight of children who cannot play
and learn because they work touches a raw nerve everywhere. I am
sure all of us wish we had the powers of Harry Potter to wave a
wand and change their lives, said the Director-General.
The conference also launched the World Day
Against Child Labour, celebrated on 12 June, aimed at reinforcing
the global movement to abolish child labour.
Safety and Health
The latest ILO estimates for the year 2000 show that annually there
are two million work-related deathsmore than 5,000 every dayand
for every fatal accident there are another 500-2,000 injuries, depending
on the type of job. In addition, the ILO said for every fatal work-related
disease there are about 100 other illnesses causing absence from
work.
In the report Decent WorkSafe Work,
Introductory Report to the XVIth World Congress on Safety and Health
at Work, the ILO says the number of estimated annual deaths among
workers has clearly increased since 1990, mainly because work-related
communicable diseases were not counted previously and the number
of cases of work-related cancer and circulatory diseases have increased.
During this same period, figures for fatal accidents went up slightly
in developing countries but decreased in most industrialized countries.
The Conference adopted a new Protocol to
the Occupational Safety and Health Convention No. 155, adopted in
1981, and a Recommendation updating a 22-year-old list of occupational
diseases. The Protocol asks ratifying Member States to establish
and review requirements and procedures for the recording and the
notification of occupational accidents and diseases, dangerous occurrences
and commuting accidents. It also asks Member States to publish annual
statistics following classification schemes that are compatible
with the latest international schemes of the ILO or other relevant
international organizations. The Recommendation asks Member States
to establish a national list of occupational diseases for the purpose
of prevention, recording, notification and compensation.
The Situation of Workers in the Occupied
Arab Territories
The Conference also debated the situation in the occupied Arab territories
and heard pledges in support of enhancing ILO efforts to create
jobs in the area and promote dialogue between Palestinians and Israelis.
Mr. Somavía said the ILO would allocate resources immediately with
a view to establishing a Palestinian Fund for Employment and Social
Protection.
The present situation cannot continue
and only dialogue can lead to peace, the Director-General
said in his address to the Conference. I appeal to Palestinian
and Israeli constituents to take the risk of embarking on social
dialogue across the present divide in their specific areas of competence.
We shall assist and support you in all possible ways.
The whole of the ILO has a responsibility
and we cannot shirk it, Mr. Somavía continued. Beyond
the ILO, the international community must respond to the aspirations
of all families in the region: parents at work, children at school,
security in the streets and peace in the community.
Conclusion
Concluding, the Director-General said that the ILO will be guided
in the years ahead by the resolution adopted at this Conference
that encourages us all to renew our efforts to strengthen tripartism
[governments, workers and employers] and social dialogue at home
and here at the ILO across the range of all our activities.
He said the resolution recognizes the value of dialogue with other
civil society organizations at both the national and international
levels. At a time when many international organizations are
finding international consensus difficult to find, the resolution
shows that the ILO has the potential will to move forward and to
deepen our commitment to tripartism.
Mr. Somavía said that 347 speakers addressed
the plenary sessions, but noted with disappointment
that only 45, or 13%, were women. He urged governments, workers
and employers to consider ways of ensuring a stronger participation
of women at the annual Conference, and suggested the ILO might
consider setting a target in the coming years for addressing
gender imbalance among the speakers.
Contact: Department of Communication,
ILO, 4 route des Morillons, CH-1211 Geneva 22, Switzerland, telephone
+41-22/799 7940, fax +41-22/799 8577, e-mail <presse@ilo.org>,
website (www.ilo.org).
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HIGH
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The UN General Assembly held a high-level
information and communication technologies (ICT) development meeting
from17-18 June in New York, bringing together ministers and other
government representatives, chief executive officers of digital
corporations, information technology experts and representatives
of civil society to address the digital gap.
The high-level meeting sought to promote
coherence and collaboration between regional and international ICT
initiatives, discussed the United Nations ICT Task Force (see Go
Between 88) and also contributed to the preparation of the 2003
World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS, see NGLS Roundup
95) held in Geneva from 1-5 July.
UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, in his
opening statement, said the world was still far from ensuring that
ICT benefits were available to all, stressing that efforts to reverse
that situation must be based on the real needs of those requiring
help and that better ways must be found to ensure the participation
of developing countries at all stages. President of Senegal, Abdoulaye
Wade, head of the ICT activities in the New Partnership for Africas
Development (NEPAD), said the struggle to harness the benefits of
new technologies was well under way but stressed that partnerships
must provide equal opportunities to all countries, for all men and
women. An estimated two-thirds of the worlds population are
excluded from the benefits of the digital revolution.
Yoshio Utsumi, Secretary-General of the
International Telecommunication Union (ITU), said that while ICT
initiatives in many regions were making the notion of a global
village a reality, many of the worlds inhabitants were
being excluded and said every effort must be made to extend ICT
to every citizen of the world, adding that ICT may help poor countries
leapfrog development opportunity. José María Figueres-Olsen,
the Secretary-Generals Special Representative for ICT and
Chair of the UN ICT Task Force, said that the meeting sought to
further the bridge building between his Task Force and other efforts,
particularly with the private sector.
In parallel with the plenary, two informal
panels were held to discuss how ICT can foster development to meet
the Millennium Summit goals, building on broad partnerships for
promoting digital opportunity; and to address the role of the United
Nations in supporting efforts to promote digital opportunity, in
particular in Africa and the least developed countries.
A number of suggestions were brought forth
by delegates addressing the meeting. Kenshiro Matsunami, Parliamentary
Secretary for Foreign Affairs of Japan, warned that the digital
divide could result in a further widening of the economic gap between
industrialized and developed countries. He stressed the importance
of making full use of private sector energy in order to use ICT
effectively for development, and called on developing countries
to establish an environment congenial to private sector activities
in order to attract foreign investment, demonstrate ownership, and
make efforts to improve the environment for business and investment.
Orlando Jorge Mera, President of the Institute
of Telecommunications of the Dominican Republic, said the right
to knowledge was inherent to all citizens and that exclusion only
contributed to despair. He said that what the developing countries
needed was for new technologies to reach them at an affordable cost
and in an equitable manner. He called on the international community
to strengthen global education systems and elaborate clear rules
and regulations on the use of ICT to ensure an equitable information
society.
Costa Rican representative Bernd Niehaus
said the only way for developing countries to close their digital
gap with the developed world is through strong political commitment
in poor countries to investing in the future and to building the
necessary infrastructure to engage the technological revolution.
Cubas Orlando Requeijo Gual and Brazils Luis Tupy Caldas
de Moura, however, said most developing countries need to devote
their limited resources to poverty eradication. Because these countries
are forced to concentrate on more urgent needs such as raising nutritional
levels and eradicating illiteracy, the West should provide assistance
to offer technology to the poor, Mr. Requeijo Gual said.
In his statement, General Assembly President
Han Seung-soo called for the problem to be addressed from both sides.
Although the information technology needs of poor countries will
require support from the international community, he
said, the potential of collaboration among developing countries
(South-South cooperation) should also be fully explored. He
said technological advances can bridge the distance between
rural and urban populations and significantly strengthen
the global fight against diseases such as HIV/AIDS and malaria,
as well as empowering women, the elderly and the disabled.
Computer giant Microsoft joined the World
Economic Forums CEO Charter for Digital Development, under
which it agrees to earmark at least 20% of its philanthropic budget
to providing technology for development. Hewlett-Packard (USA),
Vivendi Universal (France), MIH Group (South Africa), Masreya (Egypt)
and Equitable Cardnetwork (Philippines) are already taking part
in the programme. The UN ICT Task Force supports and promotes the
CEO Charter, which is mandated to develop and propagate creative
public and private sector initiatives to transform the digital divide
into an opportunity for growth.
Contact: Interim Secretariat of the United
Nations ICT Task Force, telephone +1-212/963 5796, fax +1-212/963
1712, e-mail <icttaskforce@un.org>, website (www.unicttaskforce.org.)
Julianne Lee, World Economic Forum, 91-93
route de la Capite, CH-1223 Cologny (Geneva), Switzerland, telephone
+41-22/869 1214, e-mail <julianne.lee@weforum.org> website (www.weforum.org).
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MEETINGS ON THE MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS |
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The UN Millennium Development Goals (MDGs),
adopted as part of the Millennium Declaration, committed signatories
to achieving, by 2015, ambitious objectives in halving world poverty
and hunger, controlling killer diseases, achieving universal education,
and reversing environmental degradation. The two following meetings
are an example of the growing number of initiatives that are building
the profile of the MDGs.
The MDGs are potentially very useful tools
that can focus energies on sustainable development, provided they
open debates on national policy and generate sufficient political
will and financial commitments. These were some of the views expressed
at a policy dialogue on the MDGs between civil society and non-governmental
organizations (CSOs/NGOs), government ministers and UN officials
organized by the German Foundation for International Development
(DSE) in cooperation with the United Nations Development Programme
(UNDP) held in Berlin from 27-28 June 2002.
UNDP Administrator Mark Malloch Brown said
that the International Financing for Development Conference held
in Monterey last March gave a big boost to the international commitment
on resources (see NGLS Roundup 91). Citing an emerging consensus
across party lines in the United States that higher levels of development
assistance are critical, Mr. Malloch Brown said that US aid is up
by 50%, and EU aid levels as a proportion of gross domestic product
(GDP) have risen from 0.33 to 0.39%. We are moving in the
right direction, the political templates are changing, but there
are no commitments yet on getting anywhere near the amount needed,
he said.
The ambition of the MDGsthrough national
reports coordinated by UN country teams and civil society campaignsis
to change policies in developing countries to reduce poverty and
improve the access of the poor to basic services. We want
the numbers in those reports to shock voters in the rich countries
into demanding more of their governments, Mr. Malloch Brown
said. UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan has given UNDP the task of
campaign manager and scorekeeper on the MDGs.
United Nations Childrens Fund (UNICEF)
Deputy Executive Director Kul Gautam stressed the imperativeness
of forging alliances and partnerships, and emphasized the need for
a system of public monitoring and accountability on the goals, one
that is not confined to expert analysis but involves the participation
of communities. Monitoring should be designed to provoke public
debate in parliaments and assemblies and avoid unintended discrimination.
CSOs/NGOs with campaign and advocacy experience
present at the meeting affirmed the centrality of civic engagement
in advancing the MDGs, saying this could take various forms, such
as national monitoring, as in the Philippines, or stimulating public
debate and campaign strategies through regional forums, as in West
Africa. Whatever the type of engagement, it is always key to link
local discourse to the global level, said Sheela Patel, Director
of the Society for the Promotion of Area Resource Centres (SPARC)
in India. Consensus building has to be horizontal, she said. The
local constituency is not there only to react, without being involved.
The poor make a lot of investments in their development and we must
take account of their aspirations.
Social Watch and ActionAid said they are already
using the MDGs in their global policy and advocacy reports and are
well placed to participate in the national reporting on the goals.
The 2002 Social Watch report (www.socialwatch.org) measures progress
on the goals and ranks countries in terms of official development
assistance (ODA) and social expenditures on basic services and also
charts the ratification of international treaties cited in the Millennium
Declaration. Roberto Bissio of Social Watch called on the UN to
create more space for genuine civic engagement in the global monitoring
and reporting on the MDGs in the General Assembly.
CEA SURF Forum on the MDGs in Central and
Eastern Africa
From 17-19 June, the Central and East Africa Sub-Regional Resource
Facility (CEA-SURF), in collaboration with the Ethiopian and Cameroonian
country offices, convened the Campaigning for Action: Forum on the
Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) in Central and Eastern Africa,
in Addis Ababa (Ethiopia). Participants included country delegations
of the 14 CEA countries, regional and international institutions,
national and international CSOs/NGOs, as well as the media and business
sectors.
The meeting sought to raise awareness of
the MDGs and to discuss the various components required for carrying
them out, with topics ranging from country level reporting and costing
to campaigning, monitoring and evaluation. Discussion focused on
the challenges CEA countries face in meeting the MDGs and the types
of steps necessary to achieve them. Country delegations were able
to develop their own national strategies outlining key actions and
possible time frames to reach the goals by 2015, with most strategies
coinciding as they addressed alignment and consistency between the
MDG process and others, such as the poverty reduction strategy papers
(PRSPs). Other common elements included developing a clear communication
strategy, the mobilization of domestic resources, and capacity building.
Participants proposed that poverty reduction
be the main thrust of the MDGs, and identified bad governance;
lack of peace and security; cross border issues such as refugees;
HIV/AIDS; low capacity; and lack of financial and human resources
as the main barriers to successfully achieving the MDGs. Delegates
identified community development; mobilizing domestic resources;
debt relief, particularly multilateral debt (for least developed
and medium-income countries); and capital flight as key issues to
tackle.
Participants endorsed a draft statement of
action and declaration during the final session of the forum. The
declaration recognizes the challenges faced by the countries in
the region, such as poverty and the prevalence of HIV/AIDS, but
also calls attention to more positive notes such as returning stability
and peace in the region, and more concerted efforts by governments
to address poverty within their own countries.
CSOs/NGOs
In his concluding statement to the Forum, Action Aid Ethiopia declared
that partnership between CSOs/NGOs, donors, governments and the
business sector had been given the rightful place and recognition
at the Forum. Moreover, he stated that the MDGs should be rooted
in the human rights approach to development.
Building the capacity of CSOs/NGOs and the
importance of an enabling environment emerged as the principal issues
among the CSOs/NGOs as both are viewed as critical to their engagement
in the MDG process. CSOs/NGOs expressed the need to position themselves
as partners in the development process and emphasized their role
in sensitizing and sharing information at the community level. More
interaction between northern and southern CSOs/NGOs was encouraged,
especially in the areas of information exchange and capacity building.
It was recommended that a mechanism for consultation be established
between donors and CSOs/NGOs and that a joint strategy for monitoring
be developed.
CSOs/NGOs said that MDGs need to popularized
and that local and traditional authorities should be engaged, while
noting that the campaign surrounding the MDGs would define their
success or failure.
Contact: Jan Vandermoortele, Principal Advisor
and Group Leader, Social Development Group, United Nations Development
Programme, 1 UN Plaza, Room DC1-2042, New York NY 10017, USA, telephone
+1-212/906 5862, fax +1-212/906 5857, e-mail <jan.vandermoortele@undp.org>,
website (www.undp.org/mdg).
Social Watch, c/o The Third World Institute,
PO Box 1539, Montevideo 11000, Uruguay, e -mail <socwatch@socialwatch.org>,
website (www.socialwatch.org).
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CALENDAR |
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DISARMAMENT |
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Conference on Disarmament, 3rd part,
29 July-13 September, Geneva
Preparatory Commission for the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban-Treaty
Organization, 18th session, 20-23 August, Vienna
4th meeting of the States Parties to the Convention on the
Prohibition of the Use, Stockpiling, Production and Transfer of
Anti-Personnel Landmines and on Their Destruction,
16-20 September, Geneva
Disarmament Commission, Organizational session, December
(2 days), New York
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ECOSOC/GENERAL ASSEMBLY |
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General
Assembly, 57th session, September-December, New York |
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FOOD
AND AGRICULTURE
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Commission
on Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture (CGRFA), acting as the
interim committee for the International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources
for Food and Agriculture, 9-11 October, Rome
9th regular session, Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture,
14-18 October, Rome |
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HUMAN RIGHTS |
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Subcommission on the Promotion and
Protection of Human Rights, Working Group on Communications, 19-30
August, Geneva
Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination,
61st session, August (3 weeks)
Working Group on Arbitrary Detention
34th session, 9-13 September, Geneva
35th session, 25 November-6 December, Geneva
Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights,
27th session, 11-29 November
Rights of the Child
Committee on the Rights of the Child, 31st session,
16 September-4 October, Geneva
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NARCOTIC DRUGS |
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International
Narcotics Control Board, 75th session,
30 October-15 November |
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REFUGEES |
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Pre-Executive
Committee Consultations with NGOs,
25-27 September, Geneva
Executive Committee, 53rd session, 30 September-4 October, Geneva
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SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT |
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World Summit on Sustainable Development,
26 August-4 September, Johannesburg
Basel Convention
Conference of Parties, 6th session, 9-13 December, Geneva
Convention on Migratory Species
Conference of Parties, 7th session, 15-28 September, Bonn
Framework Convention on Climate Change
Conference of Parties, 8th session, 2nd sessional period,
28 October-8 November, Bonn
Global Environment Facility (GEF)
NGO Consultation, 13 October, Beijing
GEF Council Meeting, 14-15 October, Beijing
GEF Assembly, 16-18 October, Beijing
Ramsar Convention on Wetlands
Conference of Parties, 8th session, 18-26 November, Valencia
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TRADE, FINANCE AND DEVELOPMENT |
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International Monetary Fund (IMF) and
World Bank
Annual meetings of the World Bank Group and IMF,
29 September, Washington DC
UN Conference on Trade and Development
(UNCTAD)
Trade and Development Board, 49th session, 7-18 October, Geneva
Women
12th Meeting of States Parties to the CEDAW, 29 August, New
York
Exceptional session, CEDAW, 5-23 August, New York
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GUEST
EDITORIAL
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AMBASSADOR
ANWARAL KARIM CHOWDURY;
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