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Mercy Global Concern - 2005

Mercy Global Concern: Briefing paper Number 1, April 2005
IN LARGER FREEDOM:
Towards Development, Security and Human Rights for All Executive
Summary
Introduction: A Historic Opportunity in 2005 In September 2005,
world leaders will come together at a summit in New York to review
progress since the Millennium Declaration, adopted by all Member
States in 2000. The Secretary-General’s report proposes an
agenda to be taken up, and acted upon, at the summit. These are
policy decisions and reforms that are actionable if the necessary
political will can be garnered.
Events since the Millennium Declaration
demand that consensus be revitalized on key
challenges and priorities and converted into collective action.
The guiding light in doing
so must be the needs and hopes of people everywhere. The world
must advance the
causes of security, development and human rights together, otherwise
none will
succeed. Humanity will not enjoy security without development,
it will not enjoy
development without security, and it will not enjoy either without
respect for human
rights. In a world of inter-connected threats and opportunities,
it is in each country’s self-interest that all of these challenges
are addressed effectively. Hence, the cause of larger freedom can
only be advanced by broad, deep and sustained global cooperation
among States.
The world needs strong and capable States, effective
partnerships with civil society and the private sector, and agile
and effective regional and global intergovernmental
institutions to mobilize and coordinate collective action. The
United Nations must be reshaped in ways not previously imagined,
and with a boldness and speed not previously shown.
I. Freedom
from want
The last 25 years have seen the most dramatic reduction
in extreme poverty the world
has ever experienced. Yet dozens of countries have become poorer.
More than a billion people still live on less than a dollar a day.
Each year, 3 million people die from
HIV/AIDS and 11 million children die before reaching their fifth
birthday. Today’s is the first generation with the resources
and technology to make the right to development a reality for everyone
and to free the entire human race from want. There is a shared
vision of development. The Millennium Development Goals (MDGs),
which range from halving extreme poverty to putting all children
into primary school and stemming the spread of infectious diseases
such as HIV/AIDS, all by 2015, have become globally accepted benchmarks
of broader progress, embraced by donors, developing countries,
civil society and major development institutions alike.
The MDGs
can be met by 2015 - but only if all involved break with business
as usual and dramatically accelerate and scale up action now. In
2005, a “global partnership for development” --
one of the MDGs reaffirmed in 2002 at the International Conference
on Financing for Development at Monterrey, Mexico and the World
Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg, South Africa
-- needs to be fully implemented. That partnership is grounded
in mutual responsibility and accountability - developing countries
must strengthen governance, combat corruption, promote private
sector-led growth and maximize domestic resources to fund national
development strategies, while developed countries must support
these efforts through increased development assistance, a new development-oriented
trade round and wider and deeper debt relief.
The following are
priority areas for action in 2005:
- National
strategies: Each developing country with extreme poverty should
by 2006 adopt and begin to implement a national development
strategy bold enough to meet the MDG targets for 2015. Each strategy
needs
to take into account seven broad “clusters” of public
investments and policies: gender equality, the environment, rural
development, urban development, health systems, education, and
science, technology and innovation.
- Financing for development:
Global development assistance must be more than
doubled over the next few years. This does not require new pledges
from donor
countries, but meeting pledges already made. Each developed country
that has
not already done so should establish a timetable to achieve the
0.7% target of
gross national income for official development assistance no later
than 2015,
starting with significant increases no later than 2006, and reaching
0.5% by 2009.
The increase should be front-loaded through an International Finance
Facility,
and other innovative sources of financing should be considered
for the longer
term. The Global Fund to Fight HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria
must be fully
funded and the resources provided for an expanded comprehensive
strategy of
prevention and treatment to fight HIV/AIDS. These steps should
be supplemented by immediate action to support a series of “Quick
Wins” - relatively inexpensive, high-impact initiatives
with the potential to generate major short-term gains and save
millions of lives, such as free distribution of anti-malarial
bednets.
- Trade: The Doha round of trade negotiations should fulfil
its development
promise and be completed no later than 2006. As a first step,
Member States
should provide duty-free and quota-free market access for all
exports from the
Least Developed Countries.
- Debt relief: Debt sustainability should be redefined as the
level of debt that
allows a country to achieve the MDGs and to reach 2015 without
an increase in
debt ratios. New action is also needed to ensure environmental
sustainability. Scientific advances and technological innovation
must be mobilized now to develop tools for mitigating climate
change, and a more inclusive international framework must be
developed for stabilizing greenhouse gas emissions beyond the
expiry of the Kyoto Protocol in 2012, with broader participation
by all major emitters and both developed and developing countries.
Concrete steps are also required on desertification and biodiversity.
Other priorities for global action include stronger mechanisms
for infectious disease surveillance and monitoring, a world-wide
early warning system on natural disasters, support for science
and technology for development, support for regional infrastructure
and institutions, reform of international financial institutions,
and more effective cooperation to manage migration for the benefit
of all.
II. Freedom from fear
While progress on development is hampered
by weak implementation, on the security
side, despite a heightened sense of threat among many, the
world lacks even a basic
consensus - and implementation, where it occurs, is all
too often contested. The Secretary-General fully embraces
a broad vision of collective security. The threats
to peace and security in the 21st century include not just
international war and conflict,
but terrorism, weapons of mass destruction, organized crime
and civil violence. They
also include poverty, deadly infectious disease and environmental
degradation, since
these can have equally catastrophic consequences. All of
these threats can cause death or lessen life chances on a
large scale. All of them can undermine States as the basic unit
of the international system. Collective security today depends
on accepting that the threats each region of the world perceives
as most urgent are in fact equally so for all. These are not theoretical
issues, but ones of deadly urgency. The United Nations must be transformed
into the effective instrument for preventing conflict that it was
always meant to be, by acting on several key policy and institutional
priorities:
- Preventing catastrophic terrorism: States should commit to
a comprehensive
anti-terrorism strategy based on five pillars: dissuading people
from resorting to
terrorism or supporting it; denying terrorists access to funds
and materials;
deterring States from sponsoring terrorism; developing State
capacity to defeat
terrorism; and defending human rights. They should conclude a
comprehensive
convention on terrorism, based on a clear and agreed definition.
They should
also complete, without delay, the convention for the suppression
of acts of
nuclear terrorism.
- Nuclear, chemical and biological weapons: Progress on both
disarmament and non-proliferation are essential. On disarmament,
nuclear-weapon States should further reduce their arsenals of
non-strategic nuclear weapons and pursue arms control agreements
that entail not just dismantlement but irreversibility, reaffirm
their commitment to negative security assurances, and uphold
the moratorium on nuclear test explosions. On non-proliferation,
the International Atomic Energy Agency’s verification authority
must be strengthened through universal adoption of the Model
Additional Protocol, and States should commit themselves to complete,
sign and implement a fissile material cut-off treaty.
- Reducing the prevalence and risk of war: Currently, half
the countries
emerging from violent conflict revert to conflict within five
years. Member States
should create an inter-governmental Peacebuilding Commission,
as well as a
Peacebuilding Support Office within the UN Secretariat, so that
the UN system
can better meet the challenge of helping countries successfully
complete the
transition from war to peace. They should also take steps to
strengthen collective
capacity to employ the tools of mediation, sanctions and peacekeeping
(including
a “zero tolerance” policy on sexual exploitation
of minors and other vulnerable
people by members of peacekeeping contingents, to match the policy
enacted by
the Secretary-General).
- Use of force: The Security Council should adopt a resolution
setting out the
principles to be applied in decisions relating to the use of
force and express its
intention to be guided by them when deciding whether to authorize
or mandate
the use of force. Other priorities for global action include
more effective cooperation to combat organized crime, to prevent
illicit trade in small arms and light weapons, and to remove
the scourge of landmines which still kill and maim innocent people
and hold back development in nearly half the world’s countries.
III. Freedom to live in dignity
In the Millennium Declaration,
Member States said they would spare no effort to promote democracy
and strengthen the rule of law, as well as respect for all internationally
recognized human rights and fundamental freedoms. And over the
last six decades, an impressive treaty-based normative framework
has been advanced.
But without implementation, these declarations ring hollow. Without
action, promises are meaningless. People who face war crimes
find no solace in the unimplemented words of the Geneva Conventions.
Treaties prohibiting torture are cold comfort to prisoners abused
by their captors, particularly if the international human rights
machinery enables those responsible to hide behind friends in high
places.
War-weary populations despair when, even though a peace
agreement has been signed, there is little progress towards government
under the rule of law. Solemn commitments to strengthen democracy
remain empty words to those who have never voted for their rulers,
and who see no sign that things are changing. Therefore, the
normative framework that has been so impressively advanced over
the last six decades must be strengthened. Even more important,
concrete steps are required to reduce selective application, arbitrary
enforcement and breach without
consequence. The world must move from an era of legislation to
implementation.
Action is called for in the following priority areas:
- Rule of law:
The international community should embrace the “responsibility
to
protect”, as a basis for collective action against genocide,
ethnic cleansing and
crimes against humanity. All treaties relating to the protection
of civilians should
be ratified and implemented. Steps should be taken to strengthen
cooperation
with the International Criminal Court and other international
or mixed war crimes
tribunals, and to strengthen the International Court of Justice.
The Secretary-
General also intends to strengthen the Secretariat’s
capacity to assist national
efforts to re-establish the rule of law in conflict and post-conflict
societies.
- Human rights: The Office of the High Commissioner for
Human Rights should
be strengthened with more resources and staff, and should play
a more active
role in the deliberations of the Security Council and of the
proposed
Peacebuilding Commission. The human rights treaty bodies of the
UN system
should also be rendered more effective and responsive.
- Democracy: A Democracy Fund should be created at the UN to
provide
assistance to countries seeking to establish or strengthen their
democracy.
IV. Strengthening the United Nations
While purposes should be
firm and constant, practice and organization need to move
with the times. If the UN is to be a useful instrument for its
Member States, and for the
world’s peoples, in responding to the challenges laid out
in the previous three parts, it must be fully adapted to the needs
and circumstances of the 21st century. A great deal has been achieved
since 1997 in reforming the internal structures and culture of
the United Nations. But many more changes are needed, both in the
executive branch - the Secretariat and the wider UN system - and
in the UN’s
intergovernmental
organs:
- General Assembly: The General Assembly should take bold measures
to streamline its agenda and speed up the deliberative process.
It should concentrate on the major substantive issues of the
day, and establish mechanisms to engage fully and systematically
with civil society.
- Security Council: The Security Council should be broadly
representative of the
realities of power in today’s world. The Secretary-General
supports the principles
for reform set out in the report of the High-level Panel, and
urges Member States
to consider the two options, Models A and B, presented in that
report, or any
other viable proposals in terms of size and balance that have
emerged on the basis of either Model. Member States should agree
to take a decision on this
important issue before the Summit in September 2005.
- Economic and Social Council: The Economic and Social Council
should be
reformed so that it can effectively assess progress in the UN’s
development
agenda, serve as a high-level development cooperation forum,
and provide
direction for the efforts of the various intergovernmental bodies
in the economic
and social area throughout the UN system.
- Proposed Human Rights
Council: The Commission on Human Rights suffers from declining
credibility and professionalism, and is in need of major reform.
It should be replaced by a smaller standing Human Rights Council,
as a principal
organ of the United Nations or subsidiary of the General Assembly,
whose members would be elected directly by the General Assembly,
by a two-thirds majority of members present and voting.
- The Secretariat: The Secretary-General will take steps to
re-align the Secretariat’s structure to match the priorities
outlined in the report, and will create a cabinet-style decision-making
mechanism. He requests Member States to give him the authority
and resources to pursue a one-time staff buy-out to refresh and
re-align staff to meet current needs, to cooperate in a comprehensive
review of budget and human resources rules, and to commission
a comprehensive review of the Office of Internal Oversight Services
to strengthen its independence and authority. Other priorities
include creating better system coherence by strengthening the
role of Resident Coordinators, giving the humanitarian response
system more effective stand-by arrangements, and ensuring better
protection of internally displaced people. Regional organizations,
particularly the African Union, should be given greater support.
The Charter itself should also be updated to abolish the “enemy
clauses”, the Trusteeship Council and the Military Staff
Committee, all of which are outdated.
Conclusion: opportunity and challenge
It is for the world community
to decide whether this moment of uncertainty presages
wider conflict, deepening inequality and the erosion of the rule
of law, or is used to
renew institutions for peace, prosperity and human rights. Now
is the time to act. The
annex to the report lists specific items for consideration by
Heads of State and
Government. Action on them is possible. It is within reach. From
pragmatic beginnings
could emerge a visionary change of direction for the world.
Deirdre Mullan rsm Director MGC
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