ACCORDING TO THE GENERAL SECRETARY OF ONU, MR KOFI ANNAN, THE PROBLEM OF UNDERDELEPMENT NATIONS CAN BE SOLVED WITH THE COMMON EFFORTS OF ALL STATES.
Following is the text of Secretary-General Kofi Annan’s speech to
the
Tenth Annual Ministerial Meeting of the Least Developed Countries:
This ministerial meeting is both timely and crucial.
It comes in the wake of the Millennium Summit, at which the leaders
of
the whole world resolved to address the special needs of the least
developed countries. And we have just six months left to prepare the
Third United Nations Conference on the Least Developed Countries,
whose success the world's leaders said they would endeavour to
ensure.
Its success cannot be taken for granted. Alas, the resounding
commitments to vigorous action in favour of least developed
countries,
given at the previous two conferences, have gone largely unfulfilled.
In
the age of globalization, the least developed countries are, for the
most
part, more marginalized and impoverished than ever before. As a
group,
they have not met any of the targets set for this year -- the year
2000 --
by the major world conferences of the past decade.
Whatever is said in Brussels next May, therefore, we shall have
difficulty in persuading the peoples of your countries to take
seriously.
How can we make this conference different from previous ones?
First, it is clear we can no longer afford to treat the problems of
least
developed countries in relative isolation from the rest of the world.
Globalization, by deepening interdependence and widening
interconnection among nations, has made the development process
much more complicated. Even though they have been unable, so far, to
play any significant role in globalization, and, therefore, are
denied
most of its benefits, many people in your countries feel threatened
by
the unpredictable forces it has unleashed. They are afraid,
understandably enough, that they will lose out even further. That
fear
was voiced by many of your heads of State and government during the
Millennium Summit.
Removing the grounds for this fear must be the central task of the
Brussels Conference. Clearly, that will require efforts on both the
domestic and the international levels. We must forge a more genuine
partnership between the least developed countries and the
international
community. Within that partnership, the primary responsibility rests
with you - your governments and your peoples. No amount of outside
help can develop a country, unless its people are given the chance to
develop themselves.
In the last resort, it is the efforts of ordinary people that will
reduce
poverty and inequality. The task of government is to adopt policies,
and
to provide an institutional and legal framework, as well as physical
infrastructure, which give people the chance to do that.
Governments must give all sectors of society the chance to play a
free
and effective role in making those policies, and to win their fair
share of
the benefits. And they must remember that development has to provide
not only a livelihood for the present generation, but a sustainable
one
for their children and grandchildren.
But, of course, least developed countries cannot be expected to
accomplish all this alone. They need real help, not just advice and
sympathy, from the world community. It is shameful that official
assistance flows to least developed countries continue to decline. It
is
deplorable that those countries' efforts to meet their people's needs
are
hampered by a crushing burden of debt. It is disheartening that they
still depend on a limited number of primary exports.
The fundamental values of freedom, equality, solidarity and shared
responsibility, which all the world's leaders have just declared
essential
to international relations in the twenty-first century, demand that
the
affluent do not leave the less fortunate behind.
It is, therefore, surely reasonable to insist that the industrialized
countries come to the Brussels Conference, ready to agree on duty-
free and quota-free access for all exports, including manufactured
exports, from least developed countries -- and that they commit
themselves to starting a genuine "development round" of world trade
negotiations without further delay. Need I repeat that, in doing so,
they
would actually be doing themselves a favour, since current
protectionist
arrangements cost their peoples many billions of dollars each year,
both as consumers and as taxpayers?
The least developed countries also need help in positioning
themselves
to make best use of the opportunities that trade can bring them. That
is the purpose of the "integrated framework" on which the United
Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and the United Nations
Trade Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) have been
working, together with the World Bank, the World Trade Organization
and other agencies. Ensuring that that framework really delivers what
it
promises must be an important item on the Brussels agenda.
It is not only reasonable but essential to insist that, by the time
of the
Brussels Conference, the rich countries implement the enhanced
programme of debt relief for heavily indebted poor countries. More
than
that, they should agree to cancel all official debts -- bilateral and
multilateral -- of poor countries that make demonstrable commitments
to reduce poverty among their people. And I hope they will also agree
to accept a more equitable process for arbitrating or mediating in
disputes between creditors and sovereign debtors.
But let us not forget the third panel of the triptych: financial
flows.
While asking industrialized countries to encourage and promote
private
flows and foreign direct investment in least developed countries, we
must also persuade them to take more seriously the targets for
official
development assistance to which they committed themselves long
ago. In this respect, the pledge given by the Irish Prime Minister at
the
Millennium Summit was very encouraging. How excellent it would be if
a whole series of ministers from industrialized countries came to
Brussels ready to make similar commitments!
Finally, the conference will have to deal with two great scourges
that
afflict a significant number of least developed countries,
particularly
those in sub-Saharan Africa, with consequences going far beyond their
national boundaries. I refer, of course, to conflict -- especially
internal
conflict - - and pandemic disease, especially HIV/AIDS.
Extreme poverty aggravates the impact of both, and they, in turn,
make
the battle against poverty far harder. It is the classic vicious
circle.
Every development strategy, national and international, must make it
a
priority to prevent, contain and reverse the spread of these twin
evils.
At stake is the very survival of many African societies.
The challenge is enormous. But some least developed countries have
succeeded in improving their economic performance -- by embracing
democracy, by involving people in decisions that affect their future,
and
by raising the status of women. I am convinced that all of them can
do
so if we all pull together -- governments, regional organizations,
private
corporations and civil society in all its forms. That will be the aim
of the
United Nations in preparing for the Conference, and in helping the
least
developed countries to do so.
I am impressed by the preparatory work done so far, especially at the
first session of the Preparatory Committee, which augurs well for
Brussels. Let me assure you that the Secretariat will spare no effort
to
give you the support you need.
20/09/2000