UNITED NATIONS OFFICIAL CALLS FOR ACTION TO REINFORCE PROGRESS IN POOREST NATIONS
Press Release DEV/2473 |
united nations official calls for action to reinforce progress in poorest nations
NEW YORK, 11 June -- There is both opportunity and urgency to address the needs of the Least Developed Countries (LDCs), the United Nations’s High Representative for the those nations, Anwarul Chowdhury, said today.
The international community has been taking incremental steps forward on issues relating to LDCs, and a good number of these socially and economically vulnerable countries have been making progress on reforms and economic growth, he said in an interview in advance of a major United Nations economic conference opening 13 June in São Paulo, Brazil.
New United Nations statistics released this month show that 21 out of 50 LDCs achieved growth rates of 5 per cent or better in 2002-2003. Ambassador Chowdhury linked progress with reforms in the LDCs, as well as improved donor assistance, recently rising commodity prices and a recovering international economy.
But “we do not know how sustainable the recovery in commodity prices will be, and how long the international economy will stay strong”, said Ambassador Chowdhury, who will speak at the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development in São Paulo at a Thursday, 17 June, panel on trade and development strategies for LDCs. “This is the time to get increased aid, fairer trade and more effective debt relief into play, so we can build momentum toward meeting the United Nations Millennium Development Goals.”
Among encouraging developments cited by Ambassador Chowdhury, who represents the interests of LDCs and developing landlocked countries and small island states at the United Nations:
-- LDCs are benefiting from an upswing in official development assistance from $52 billion to all developing countries in 2001 to $68 billion in 2003;
-- Recent statements by the European Union and the United States have revived hopes for the successful resumption of the international round of trade talks, and in particular of slashing the rich country agricultural subsidies which take a deadly toll on agriculture-dependent poor countries. In this regard, the World Trade Organization (WTO) recently ruled in favour of a complaint that included four African LDCs, whose market for cotton exports is largely blocked by subsidies;
-- Accession of 10 new member states to the European Union effectively means that their population of 75 million is added to the market that LDCs can export to without trade barriers, under the provisions of the Everything But Arms initiative;
-- Because even $68 billion in official development assistance (ODA) is below the figure of $100 billion generally cited as needed to win the war against global poverty, there will be a high-level discussion on finding innovative new sources of development funding at next week’s United Nations development conference in Brazil;
-- New proposals on increase in development assistance and invigorating debt relief for highly indebted LDCs, particularly those in Africa, received attention at the 9 June meeting of the Group of 8 in the United States.
Ambassador Chowdhury said that “the world has a moral responsibility to ensure that the population in the 50 LDCs is not left to suffer while the world is going through the process of globalization. The international community should keep the pledges made at the UN Millennium Summit in 2000.”
For more information, contact Tim Wall of the Development Section, United Nations Department of Public Information, tel.: 1-212-963-5851, e-mail: wallt@un.org.
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