Kofi Annan: 2015 Målene er bare første skridt
Revitalizing the Political Will to Achieve the
Millennium Goals
20. september 2010
People often ask me what I consider to be the highlight of my UN
career. While there were many wonderful moments, hosting the
largest collection of world leaders ever assembled to sign the
Millennium Declaration in New York is certainly among the top. The
can-do spirit in the room was infectious and, for once, the gulf
between rich and poor, between countries often at loggerheads with
each other, seemed to be bridged by a genuine partnership among
nations and people. Development issues were finally elevated to the
highest political level and, for the first time, developing
countries were challenged to translate their development vision
into nationally-owned plans.
There is no doubt that the eight Millennium Development Goals
and their framework of accountability have served the world well.
They have not only provided a much-needed sense of direction to
national plans and international cooperation -- they have also
delivered measurable results. We have seen primary school
enrollment rates double in Ethiopia and Tanzania and countries like
Malawi and Algeria transform themselves from food importers to food
exporters. We have seen HIV infections fall significantly in
Sub-Saharan Africa and the number of reported malaria cases halve
in high-burden countries like Rwanda and Zambia. All around the
world, we have seen efforts to achieve MDG-based targets improve
the lives of millions of people.
However, despite some encouraging steps forward, we are still
far from achieving what we set out to do. Too many people remain
caught in extreme poverty, too many remain hungry and sick, too
many mothers die in childbirth, and too many children still do not
go to school. We are also not yet doing enough to meet basic needs
and fulfill basic rights, to protect the environment, to build
effective international partnerships for development, or to harness
private entrepreneurship to deliver public goods and services to
those in need.
The challenges are still great and the circumstances have not
become any easier since the Millennium Summit. Back then, there was
palpable confidence that the world's problems could be addressed
collectively and an open acknowledgment that, in a world of plenty
and astounding technological progress, the poverty, hunger, and
relative deprivation that so many of our fellow human beings still
faced was intolerable.
That confidence has now faded and the international consensus on
development is in danger of crumbling under the weight of
successive crises and a changing world order -- even as the true
significance of our growing interdependence is becoming
increasingly obvious. The disappointing Climate Change Summit in
Copenhagen was an unfortunate example of this paradoxical trend. On
the one hand, the appreciation that global problems cannot be
solved in one country or continent alone is growing. On the other
hand, this is not translated into decisive action and overdue
reform of global governance. Lack of concerted leadership and
cumbersome institutional arrangements on the international level
and a growing array of financial and political pressures on the
national level are proving to be formidable obstacles.
I am worried that these obstacles risk making this week's MDG
Review Summit a futile exercise, characterized by grand speeches
and carefully-worded promises, but followed by little meaningful
action. Several important donors have already reneged on their
commitments or at least relaxed their development efforts, using a
variety of justifications ranging from concerns about aid
efficiency to the need for a more comprehensive approach to
achieving development objectives. As a result, the latest
projections predict an aid shortfall of around $21 billion against
global targets. While I agree that a more coherent and
results-oriented approach to development is needed, this should not
be used as an excuse to cut financial assistance at the first sign
of difficulties. The MDGs do not need fair-weather friends, but
serious investors in for the long haul.
Revitalizing the political will to achieve the MDGs and scaling
up proven interventions is the linchpin to success. As instigator
and guardian of the MDGs, the UN has an important role to play in
this process and the High Level Advocacy Group created by
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon is a welcome step in the right
direction. The primary responsibility, however, rests with national
leaders. Their challenge is to re-articulate a compelling case for
global solidarity and equitable growth -- one that embraces but
goes beyond aid. One that addresses the growing inequalities
between male and female, rural and urban, rich and poor. One that
does not measure development and progress purely in terms of GDP
but also of the quality and sustainability of growth. The message
must be that MDG achievement is not optional, but an essential
investment in a fairer, safer and more prosperous world.
But achieving the MDGs is only the first step. For even if we
succeed and meet all eight goals by 2015, almost a billion people
will continue to live below the poverty line, hundreds of millions
will remain hungry and millions will continue to die from
preventable diseases or unnecessary complications. We will
certainly need to take the MDGs to the next level after the initial
deadline. While there is some skepticism about the utility of
naming specific goals as basis for development strategies and
institutional arrangements, I remain an advocate. After all, who
can argue with an objective as simple and powerful as access to
food and clean drinking water, jobs, health care and education for
everyone?
Kofi Annan was UN Secretary General between 1997 and 2006.
He now chairs the Africa Progress Panel (www.africaprogresspanel.org).
Kilde: Huffington Post
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