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..Press
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UNESCAP News Services
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Date 7 July
2005
Press Release No: G/15/2005 (Reissued as received.)
Regional groups offer mixed picture
of progress towards development goals
Bangkok (UN Information Services) -- From the
Caribbean islands to South Asia and Africa, officials from the
major United Nations regional groups report scattershot progress
towards meeting agreed development goals, as individual countries
struggle to cope with debt, the effects of natural disasters,
wobbly economies and the uncertainties of war and political
tension.
In their annual dialogue with the UN Economic and Social Council
(ECOSOC) yesterday, the heads of the major groups – Latin
America and the Caribbean, Europe, Asia and the Pacific, Western
Asia and Africa – detailed the status of efforts to achieve
the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) at the regional level.
Their presentations revealed sharp contrasts across, and even
within regions, in some of the primary MDG target areas, which
range from halving extreme poverty to halting the spread of
HIV/AIDS and providing universal primary education, all by 2015.
Warning against generalizing global development trends, Brigita
Schmögnerová, Executive Secretary of the Economic
Commission for Europe (ECE) and Commission Coordinator, stressed
that regional cooperation offered countries a way to address
common development challenges. While country-level ownership
of the MDGs was key, regional approaches and South-South cooperation
could reinforce good practices at the country level and promote
them on a wider scale within developing regions.
José Luis Machinea, Executive Secretary of the Economic
Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), agreed,
adding that regional dimensions offered countries an effective
instrument for cooperation in facing common development challenges
and in reaching the Goals. That was especially important in
relation to issues of a cross-border nature, such as trade,
sustainable development and natural disasters.
Highlighting striking regional disparities, Kim Hak Su, Executive
Secretary of the Economic and Social Commission for Asia and
the Pacific (ESCAP), said that while many countries, especially
in South and South-East Asia, were on track to achieve most
of the MDGs, many others, including small island developing
states, were not. He was very concerned about the least developed
Asian countries, the largest of which was Bangladesh, and their
progress. The more successful countries must help those in greater
difficulty, he said.
K.Y. Amoako, Executive Secretary of the Economic Commission
for Africa (ECA), said global partnerships today required cooperation
between rich and poor countries on numerous levels for activities
such as the transfer of technology. Africa's main concern as
a region was to form strong partnerships at the national, regional
and special partnerships levels. Partnerships at the national
level called for addressing each country's specific needs and
for strengthening cooperation between governments and civil
society.
Focusing on other issues pressuring development, Khaled Abdel
Hamid, Secretary of the Economic and Social Commission for Western
Asia (ESCWA), said the overall GDP of his region would have
increased by $600 billion since 1990, if there had not been
instability or war. Such instability affected not only the growth
of the countries in the region, but also the work and assistance
offered by ESCWA. Continued instability affected investment,
but that was not the whole picture. Institutions and policies
also played a role and ESCWA worked with countries, in that
regard. For example, ESCWA worked with the Palestinian Authority
to crystallize development in the occupied territories, despite
the continuing instability there.
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