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Press
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UNESCAP News Services
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13 October 2003
Press Release No: L/36/2003; SG/SM/8935; OBV/384
A WORLD MIRED IN DESPAIR OF POVERTY 'WILL NOT
BE A WORLD AT PEACE', SAYS SECRETARY-GENERAL, IN MESSAGE ON
INTERNATIONAL DAY
Following is Secretary-General Kofi Annan's message
on the International Day for the Eradication of Poverty, observed
17 October:
Yesterday, we observed World Food Day. Today,
we observe the International Day for the Eradication of Poverty.
This year, we are holding joint events in recognition of the
close links between hunger and poverty.
Approximately 1.2 billion people struggle to survive
on less than a dollar a day. An estimated 840 million suffer
the gnawing pain of hunger, and as many as 24,000 people, many
of them children, die every day as a result. People who are
hungry are more susceptible to disease, and find their capacity
to work diminished as well. Hunger also impairs children's ability
to learn, with consequences that are felt long after childhood
is over. There is no time to lose if we are to reach the Millennium
Development Goal -- agreed by all the world's countries -- of
halving by 2015 the proportion of people who live on less than
a dollar a day and the proportion of people who suffer from
hunger.
The achievement of that goal -- and all the other
Millennium Development Goals -- depends on many things. But
none is more vital than forging a truly global partnership for
development -- which is itself one of the Millennium Development
Goals. Such a partnership requires bold reforms from many developing
countries. But it also requires bold action from developed countries.
An essential component is a trading system that
is both free and equitable. The failure of the recent World
Trade Organization meeting in Canc?n to reach agreement on reducing
and ultimately phasing out tariff and non-tariff barriers is
a source of great concern. These barriers shut out many developing
countries from the markets of developed countries -- stunting
growth, stifling opportunity and starving millions of people
who want to trade their way out of poverty.
The Monterrey and Johannesburg conferences on
financing for development and sustainable development also set
out key parameters and commitments for building a global partnership
for development. Some progress has been made, but much more
needs to be done to meet those commitments.
A world that is not advancing towards the Millennium
Development Goals -- a world mired in the deprivation of hunger,
the prevalence of disease and the despair of poverty -- will
not be a world at peace. On this day, as we recall the link
between poverty and hunger, let us also recall the link between
development and peace. And in that spirit, let rich and poor
alike rededicate themselves to achieving the Millennium Development
Goals.
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