The UN Millennium Summit and Assembly
- Issue 17 Refugee return and accountability
- 1 Échange Humanitaire No. 17 : Le retour des réfugiés & La qualité et la responsabilisation
- 2 ‘We Are Not Treated Like People’: The Roll Back Xenophobia Campaign in South Africa
- 3 The Human Rights Act and Refugees in the UK
- 4 Return Requires Time and Patience
- 5 Sphere at the End of Phase II
- 6 Using Sphere: Oxfam’s Experience in West Africa
- 7 Sphere in India: Experiences and Insights
- 8 Gendering Sphere
- 9 The Humanitarian Accountability Project: A Voice for People Affected by Disaster and Conflict
- 10 The Limits and Risks of Regulation Mechanisms for Humanitarian Action
- 11 Regaining Perspective: The Debate over Quality Assurance and Accountability
- 12 The UN Joint Logistics Operation in Mozambique
- 13 Forgotten, not Forgiven: Somalia's Painful Transition from War to Peace
- 14 Disarmament and Demobilisation in Sierra Leone
- 15 The Protection Gap: Policies and Strategies
- 16 Developing the ALNAP Learning Office Concept
- 17 The Performance and Accountability of Donor Aid Administrations: The Role of Parliaments
- 18 Protecting Civilians in Armed Conflicts: The Creation of a Humanitarian Commission within the UN
- 19 Evaluating the Humanitarian Response to Kosovo
- 20 Contingency Planning in the Balkans: From Lessons Learned to Emergency Readiness
- 21 New Guidelines to Save Older People's Lives in Emergencies
- 22 Professionalising Emergency Personnel
- 23 Strategy 2010: All Change at the Fed?
- 24 Security-Sector Reform: A Work in Progress
- 25 US Arrears to the UN
- 26 The UN Millennium Summit and Assembly
- 27 UN General Assembly Adopts Child Soldiers Protocol
In what was billed as the largest-ever gathering of heads of state and government, more than 180 members of the UN came together in New York for the Millennium Summit on 68 September 2000. The summits broad agenda covered issues as diverse as globalisation and governance; issues of poverty and income inequality, both within and between nations; internal conflict; sustainable development; and a reformed, stronger UN. Whether the large powers find the collective will to turn rhetoric into action is, of course, another matter.
The summit closed with the adoption of a wide-ranging Millennium Declaration setting out the challenges facing the UN in the twenty-first century. The declaration put forward a series of detailed commitments.
Among the steps aimed at development and eradicating poverty, the declaration pledged that, by 2015:
- the proportion of people with incomes of less than one dollar a day would be halved;
- that access to all levels of education would be equal, both for girls and boys;
- that primary schooling would be available for all children everywhere;
- that maternal mortality would be cut by three-quarters; and
- that the spread of HIV/AIDS, malaria and other major diseases would be halted, if not reversed.
By 2020, the declaration committed UN members to achieving a significant improvement in the lives of at least 100m slum dwellers.
In terms of peace and security subject of a special Security Council summit the declaration resolved to strengthen the rule of law and ensure compliance with decisions of the International Court of Justice; to provide the UN with the resources it needs for conflict prevention and resolution; and to take action against drug-trafficking and terrorism. UN members also pledged to minimise the adverse effects of economic sanctions, and to review sanction regimes regularly.
Africa was given special attention; here, UN members undertook to support the consolidation of democracy, and pledged to help African states in their attempts to reduce poverty, move towards sustainable development and bring Africa into the mainstream of the world economy. Specific measures included a restatement of the pledge to cancel debt, as well as greater official development assistance and investment.
Alongside these ambitious objectives, the declaration also called for a stronger, better financed and more effective and better-equipped UN. The document pledged comprehensive reform (that is, expansion) of the Security Council an objective put forward particularly strongly by South African President Thabo Mbeki and a stronger International Court of Justice. It also called on members to make their contributions more predictable and more timely, and acknowledged the need for the more efficient use of these resources by the UN itself.
The declaration ends with a solemn reaffirmation of the UNs position as the indispensable common house of the entire human family. But how far the rhetoric becomes reality remains dependent on the political will of the organisations members.
For details of the Millenium Summit and Assembly, see: <www.un.org/millennium/index.html>.
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