SECRETARY-GENERAL PRAISES 'FORMIDABLE ACHIEVEMENTS', WARNS AGAINST COMPLACENCY, AS HE INTRODUCES REPORT ON MEETING GOALS OF 1990 CHILDREN'S SUMMIT
Press Release
SG/SM/6078
SECRETARY-GENERAL PRAISES 'FORMIDABLE ACHIEVEMENTS', WARNS AGAINST COMPLACENCY, AS HE INTRODUCES REPORT ON MEETING GOALS OF 1990 CHILDREN'S SUMMIT
19961014 Following is the text of the statement of Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali delivered today to the General Assembly introducing the report on progress at mid-decade on implementation of General Assembly resolution 45/217 on the World Summit for Children:The World Summit for Children was held six years ago in this building. Six Member States -- Canada, Egypt, Mali, Mexico, Pakistan and Sweden -- convened the unprecedented meeting, with the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) serving as Secretariat. Seventy-one heads of State or government and 88 ministerial delegates participated, making it the largest gathering of world leaders held up until then. It was the first truly global summit conference in history, inaugurating the series of major international development conferences of the 1990s and our collective assault on poverty on the threshold of the twenty-first century.
At the World Summit for Children, the high expectations of the international community immediately following the end of the cold war were translated into commitments to children. The participants pledged to achieve seven major goals -- and 20 supporting goals -- relating to the survival, health, nutrition, education and protection of children, by the year 2000. The General Assembly, in its resolution 45/217 of 21 December 1990, urged the international community to work together to achieve them.
What can we say six years later? Are the promises made to children in 1990 being kept? How have the world's children fared?
The findings in report A/51/256 on the progress that has been made since the World Summit for Children are, on the whole, a cause for celebration -- and we did just that two weeks ago in the Trusteeship Council Chamber, on the sixth anniversary of the Summit, with children, the President of the General Assembly, representatives of the initiating countries, the Executive Director of UNICEF and others. It is not often that we are able to report global breakthroughs in the field of development. So we are particularly gratified and encouraged that we now can point to considerable and widespread progress for children, who are our collective future.
Although there is considerable variation across countries and regions, information we have from over 90 countries suggests an encouraging trend toward the achievement of the majority of goals for children in most countries. The greatest progress has been in control of preventable diseases. Immunization continues to reach approximately 80 per cent of all children before their first birthday, up fourfold in little over ten years and now saving 3 million young children every year. Polio has been eradicated from large parts of the world and, with continued effort, this scourge should go the way of smallpox by the year 2000 or shortly thereafter. Major progress has been made towards elimination of neonatal tetanus. Guinea worm disease, which tormented and sapped the energies of millions of people only five years ago, is now on the verge of elimination, having declined by 97 per cent. There has been dramatic improvement in home management of diarrhoea, the second leading cause of child deaths; use of oral rehydration therapy (ORT) has doubled over the last five years, and is now saving the lives of some 1 million children every year. Some 1.5 billion more people are consuming iodized salt today than in 1990, preventing the largest single cause of preventable mental retardation in children. Vitamin A supplementation and fortification to prevent blindness and immune system damage to young children is up in many countries. Thousands of hospitals have stopped distributing free breast milk substitutes and are promoting and supporting breast-feeding. Access to safe water has improved considerably. Some 82 per cent of all primary school-age children are now enroled.
These would be formidable achievements under any circumstances. But the fact that so much progress has been made in a period of unprecedented population growth, proliferating conflicts, widening gaps between rich and poor, and cutbacks in government budgets and development assistance, attests to the increased importance of children on the international agenda. It demonstrates the effectiveness of the strategies and low-cost interventions being used to improve children's lives.
Member States should feel encouraged by this performance. I am proud that the United Nations -- whose work in development often goes underreported and unrecognized -- has been able to make such an important contribution. And I want to take this opportunity to recognize and commend the leadership role that UNICEF has played in this United Nations "success story". UNICEF will continue to play an indispensable role in the future.
The children who spoke at the Summit commemoration two weeks ago warned us, however, against complacency. They spoke with deep emotion on behalf of their sisters and brothers throughout the world who are still being bypassed by progress. And the Executive Director of UNICEF, Carol Bellamy, reminded us that progress made to date must now be sustained, and that special efforts will be needed to accelerate progress in areas where results have been disappointing to date. The rate of child mortality reduction, while declining, is still too slow to reach the year 2000 goal. New estimates show that maternal mortality is a
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bigger problem than it was previously thought. There has been little or no improvement in child malnutrition. The quality of basic education leaves much to be desired, resulting in high drop-out rates, particularly for girls. Safe drinking water supply has not kept pace with population growth, especially in cities, and progress in providing adequate sanitation has lagged even more. Millions of children continue to lose their childhoods on battlefields and streets, in brothels and sweatshops.
In presenting this report to the General Assembly, therefore, I want to emphasize the need to reaffirm the commitments made to children in 1990. The progress I have outlined today must generate greater momentum. We must redouble our efforts to achieve the year 2000 goals, adjusting them where necessary and tailoring the strategies used to achieve them to the realities of each country. Civil societies will have to play a greater role, along with governments at all levels, if the goals are to be met. Economic and social empowerment of the poor is critically important. Increased investment in basic social services for all, while necessary, will not be sufficient to sustain reductions in poverty; economic policies aimed at more equal distribution of land, credit and income are also essential. We must increasingly use the Convention on the Rights of the Child -- now nearly universal -- as a social tool to reach the unreached, to meet the needs and respect the rights of the most disadvantaged, the most vulnerable, and children of discriminated minorities. Improving the status, well-being and opportunities of girls and women is particularly important. Follow-up to the World Summit for Children and the other global conferences of this decade needs to be pursued in an integrated fashion, with full United Nations system coordination on the ground. The troubling trend that has brought development assistance to its lowest level in a quarter century must be reversed.
The report you have before you today tells us what works in development. It tells us that international cooperation is getting measurable results. It tells us that summits and global conferences can make a real difference. It tells us that the twenty-first century can be brighter -- if we have the political will to put children first -- than many expect. It tells us that investing in children and women is the path to sustainable development.
Children are a prominent feature of the fifty-first General Assembly. In addition to addressing this report in plenary and in the Second and Third Committees of the General Assembly, you will be discussing the full range of children's rights in the Third Committee. And you will soon have before you the important Report on the Impact of Armed Conflict on Children, prepared under the leadership of Graca Machel.
Our deliberations here over the coming months can help maintain and accelerate the pace of progress for the world's children. It is my hope that an end-decade review will be held in the year 2000, and its results presented to the General Assembly, to advance global cooperation on behalf of the world's young into the next century.
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