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Date
: 10/02/05
Source: United Nation Organisation
Title: Annan: Todays threats -Terrorism, poverty, require reformed
UN
Thank you, Prime Minister, for that remarkable introduction. You
have very lucidly provided the context for what I am about to say
this morning.
It's a great honour to be invited to speak in this historic
setting. The fact that you want to hear from the Secretary-General
of the United Nations at this time, and that Prime Minister Tony
Blair himself suggested this public exchange of ideas, suggests to
me that both you and he are conscious of the remarkable moment in
world history that we have reached.
Indeed, today we face threats to world order and world peace of a
kind and a scale that we have not seen since the height of the Cold
War. But if we can agree on ways to respond effectively to those
threats, we also have a unique opportunity to build a world that
will be safer, fairer and freer, for all its inhabitants. I think
you glimpsed that opportunity during the G7 finance ministers'
meeting here in London last week, with its welcome emphasis on
measures to attack world poverty and achieve the Millennium
Development Goals.
What kind of threats do I have in mind?
The most obvious are terrorism and weapons of mass destruction.
Many experts tell us the question is not whether, but how soon, the
two will be combined -- and we see, for example, a “dirty
bomb” detonated in central London, or some other major
capital.
The loss of life would be shocking, but as nothing to the social
and economic effects. Disruption would be felt not only here but
around the world. Millions in Asia, Africa and Latin America would
lose their livelihoods, because of the impact on the world
economy.
People in those parts of the world already face many other, more
immediate threats -- hunger, disease, environmental degradation,
corrupt and oppressive government, civil and ethnic conflict --
threats to which the poor are always more vulnerable than the
rich.
Africa, my own continent, has the worst problems of all.
The hopes of many African countries have been blighted by HIV/AIDS,
which is devastating the most productive age-groups and the best
educated social groups, slashing life expectancy, threatening to
reverse decades of economic development.
In some parts of Africa a combination of disease, starvation and
deadly conflict is causing a disaster of tsunami proportions every
few months.
And in one part of Africa, Darfur, people continue to be driven
from their homes by a brutal campaign of rape, pillage and murder.
As the International Commission of Inquiry reported last week,
these are war crimes, and may amount to crimes against
humanity.
In this age of global interdependence, you in London can no more
afford to ignore such suffering than people in other parts of the
world could ignore it if Whitehall and the City had to be evacuated
because of a terrorist attack.
We saw, in New York four years ago, how a poor and misgoverned
country -- Afghanistan -- could become an incubator of terrorism,
with devastating consequences on the other side of the world.
And two years ago we saw how one infected traveller could
unwittingly import a deadly virus from China to Toronto, in much
less time than it takes the disease to incubate. Thanks in part to
prompt action by the World Health Organization, the world had a
narrow escape then.
Next time we may not be so lucky. As long as we don't have the
means to coordinate security and health-care policies and budgets,
in poor countries as well as rich, we shall all be more vulnerable
to disease, whether it is spreading naturally or deliberately
introduced by terrorists.
That is one of the examples given in the report, “A More
Secure World -- Our Shared Responsibility”, produced by the
High-level Panel that I set up to study global threats and
recommend changes in the international system. I'm delighted that
you are holding a debate on that report here today -- and delighted
to see two or three members of the Panel in the audience, Mr.
Gareth Evans, Robert Badinter, Lord David Hannay.
The overall message of the report is that the time is gone when
each country, or even each continent, could look after its own
security.
The threats we face are threats to all of us. And they are linked
to each other.
We will not defeat terrorism unless we also tackle the causes of
conflict and misgovernment in developing countries.
And we will not defeat poverty so long as trade and investment in
any major part of the world are inhibited by fear of violence or
instability.
That is why the “more secure world” report is so neatly
complemented by the other major report that I commissioned -- the
report of the Millennium Project headed by Jeffrey Sachs. That
report, called “Investing in Development”, shows that
we really can achieve the Millennium Development Goals -- halving
extreme poverty and hunger, achieving universal primary education,
slashing maternal and infant mortality, turning the tide against
HIV-AIDS and malaria, and the rest -- by the appointed deadline of
2015. And it shows how.
Taken together, these two reports contain an agenda of decisions
which, if governments take them promptly, and act on them, really
do give us the chance of a better, fairer and safer world in this
century.
For instance, the “more secure world” report calls for
a comprehensive global strategy to fight terrorism; a stronger
non-proliferation regime; a new Peacebuilding Commission, to stop
countries from sliding back into war and chaos after peace
agreements have been reached; a clear acceptance by the Security
Council of our collective international responsibility to protect
people against genocide and other comparable crimes, when sovereign
States prove powerless or unwilling to do so; and clear criteria of
legitimacy for the Council to use when deciding whether to
authorise or endorse the use of military force.
And the report on investing in development calls for a clear
bargain between poor countries and rich ones. Those developing
countries that are well governed, and are making the fight against
poverty their top priority, need help -- and are indeed entitled to
expect it -- in building up their capacity to produce and to
export, which, of course, depends on having the right physical and
social infrastructure in place. To make the needed investments,
they must be freed from the crippling burden of debt, and they need
new resources on top of that. And their exports must have full and
fair access to rich-country markets, and not have to compete on
world markets with subsidized rich-country products. Many donor
countries, including the United Kingdom, have now pledged to
increase their official development aid, over time, to the
long-agreed target of 0.7 per cent of gross national product. That
is very welcome, but if we are going to achieve the Millennium
Development Goals by 2015 we need the increase in spending right
away. That is why ideas like the International Finance Facility are
so important.
The report also identifies some “quick wins”, where a
relatively small expenditure could produce spectacular improvements
in a very short time. I am delighted that you, Prime Minister, have
already endorsed and adopted one of these -- the free mass
distribution of malaria bed-nets and effective anti-malaria
medicines in regions of malaria transmission by the end of 2007.
This could save the lives of up to a million African children each
year.
But the central point is that aid can make a difference, when it is
directed to countries that are well governed and capable of
absorbing it. The report says that many countries already qualify
in these respects, and suggests that, in 2005, donors should take
action by identifying at least a dozen of them as
“fast-track” countries, which should receive a rapid
scale-up of official development aid. I strongly support that
recommendation.
And I firmly believe that this September's summit at the United
Nations offers us a unique opportunity to bring all these issues
together. Next month I shall issue my own report, drawing together
the threads and suggesting an agenda of major decisions to be
taken. That will include, of course, suggestions for the
improvement of the United Nations itself.
You see, the world does need a forum for collective decision-making
and it needs an instrument of collective action. Our founders
intended the United Nations to be both those things. Our task is to
adapt and update it so that it can perform those functions in the
twenty-first century.
Perhaps not everyone realizes how much the United Nations is
already moving with the times. Twenty years ago the world could
still be categorized, rather crudely, into democracies and
autocracies. It would have been practically unthinkable for the UN
to take sides between the two, or seek to intervene in the internal
affairs of its Member States.
Today, by contrast, almost all Member States accept democratization
as something desirable, at least in theory. Rather than being
divided into two camps, they are strung out along a continuum.
Some, like Britain, are fully fledged democracies of long standing.
One or two others are still unashamedly autocratic -- or worse.
Many have made the transition to democracy since the end of the
cold war, and many more are still on the road -- definitely more
open and tolerant than they used to be, but still subject to
hesitation and backsliding.
Democratization, in other words, is a process. Credible elections
are an important staging post, but not the finishing line.
And in that great process, the United Nations is playing an
important role. Our Development Programme no longer confines itself
to narrowly economic issues. It focuses increasingly on questions
of governance, which we all now realize are decisive for
development, as I was saying earlier.
United Nations human rights staff are now posted in some 39
countries, and dozens more have benefited from technical and
advisory missions or from visits by special rapporteurs and other
human rights experts.
And one of the main divisions of our Department of Political
Affairs, these days, is devoted to Electoral Assistance. And we
have here in the room Sir Kieran Prendergast -- Head of the
Department of Political Affairs. In the past 13 years it has either
organized elections, or helped and advised local organizers, in 95
countries. Most recently, we are very proud of the role we have
played in helping the people of Afghanistan, Palestine and Iraq
take significant steps on the long, hard road to democracy.
Indeed, the latest developments in all three countries are
encouraging.
In Afghanistan the elected President's authority is increasingly
respected, and the country is now preparing for parliamentary
elections later in the year.
In Palestine and Israel, there is a real sense of opportunity: that
forward momentum can be generated and maintained. Elected leaders
on both sides have just announced a cessation of violence, after
four years of death and suffering. There is a chance for the peace
process to resume at last. We owe it to both Palestinians and
Israelis to do everything we can to help ensure that this precious
opportunity is not lost. The conference which you, Prime Minister,
have convened on 1st March here in London could not be better
timed. I look forward eagerly to attending it, as well as the
accompanying Quartet meeting, which I hope will be an occasion to
relaunch the Road Map.
And in Iraq, the success of last week's elections provides us with
an exciting moment of opportunity, in which the world can and must
come together -- whatever its past disagreements -- to assist the
Iraqi people, under new, elected leaders, in their effort to cast
off the bitter legacy of war and dictatorship and move towards a
stable and democratic society, at peace with itself and with its
neighbours. It matters greatly that Iraq's transition should be a
success. I am determined that the United Nations must play its full
part to help the Iraqi people achieve that.
No one can fail to have been moved by the Iraqis' display of
courage at the polls. The United Nations is very proud of the
assistance it was able to give them, both in developing the
political base for elections, and in the technical preparations. I
believe we can also help in the next stage -- the very delicate one
of building a constitution. And there too, our help must be both
political and technical.
Politically, my Special Representative Ashraf Qazi is already
engaged in efforts to reach out to those groups -- mainly Sunni
Arabs -- who stayed away from the elections, for whatever reason,
but are willing to pursue their goals through peaceful negotiation
and dialogue. Success in this is crucial, since inclusiveness is
the key to a successful transition.
Technically, we can give valuable advice, if asked, on the drafting
of the constitution. And we can help the Independent Electoral
Commission organize the referendum on the draft constitution, and
the subsequent parliamentary elections, as we worked with them in
preparing last week's election, and are still working with them to
tabulate and verify the results.
We are already helping with reconstruction, development and
humanitarian assistance -- rehabilitating Iraq power stations, for
instance, and providing vulnerable Iraqis with potable water. These
activities are funded by the International Reconstruction Fund
Facility, which we set up with the World Bank to help donors
channel their resources to the Iraqi reconstruction effort. So far,
24 donors have committed about one billion dollars. We must see
that these commitments are honoured, and the money properly spent.
As circumstances and funding allow, we look forward to helping
Iraqis improve their daily lives in many tangible ways.
Iraq is in a complicated region of the world, and has had a
tortured recent history in every sense. It also has a very diverse
society. But I firmly believe that, with the help of the
international community, such a society can use democratic
institutions to build itself a stable and prosperous future. That
is the hope and the vision behind which the international community
must come together, from now on, supporting the Iraqi people in
their great experiment. We have a mandate from the Security Council
to take the lead in bringing that support together, and we intend
to do it.
I said two years ago that this might be the most decisive moment
for the international system since the United Nations was founded
in 1945. I still believe that. We are living through a time of
danger, but also of great opportunity. The question is, will
governments muster the will to seize that opportunity, and decide
on a package of reforms offering protection against threats of both
kinds -- from terrorism and WMD to poverty, hunger and disease. By
tackling them all at once we can make sure that no one -- North or
South, rich or poor -- will feel left out, and that everyone will
feel an interest in implementing the whole package.
The time is ripe to bring economic and military security back into
a common framework, as our founders did at San Francisco 60 years
ago. They expressed their determination not only to “save
succeeding generations from the scourge of war” but also
“to promote social progress and better standards of living in
larger freedom”. Until now, that aspiration has been at best
only partly realized. Let's resolve, this time, to do better.