August 2, 2012
United Nations Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon today announced the members of a High-level Panel to advise on the
global development agenda beyond 2015, the target date for achieving the
anti-poverty targets known as the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).
“I have asked my High-level Panel to prepare a
bold yet practical development vision to present to Member States next year,”
Ban said in a news release.
The Panel will hold its first
meeting at the end of September, in the margins of the annual high-level debate
of the General Assembly. It is expected to submit its findings to the
Secretary-General in the first half of 2013, and those findings will inform his
report to Member States.
“I look forward to the Panel’s recommendations
on a global post-2015 agenda with shared responsibilities for all countries and
with the fight against poverty and sustainable development at its core,” Ban
said.
The 8 MDGs, agreed on by world
leaders at a UN summit in 2000, set specific targets on poverty alleviation,
education, gender equality, child and maternal health, environmental stability,
HIV/AIDS reduction, and a ‘Global Partnership for Development.’
According to a recent study – the
2012 Millennium Development Goals Report – progress has been made in some
areas, with three important targets on poverty, slums and water met three years
ahead of 2015. It added that meeting the remaining targets, while challenging,
is possible – but only if Governments do not waiver from their commitments made
over a decade ago.
The High-level Panel is part of
Secretary-General Ban’s post-2015 initiative, mandated by the 2010 MDG Summit,
at which UN Member States took stock of the progress made in achieving the
MDGs. Member States have called for open, inclusive consultations – involving civil
society, the private sector, academia and research institutions from all
regions, in addition to the UN system – to advance the development agenda
beyond 2015.
The work of the Panel will reflect
new development challenges while also drawing on experience gained in
implementing the MDGs, both in terms of results achieved and areas for
improvement, according to the news release.
The Panel’s work will be closely
coordinated with that of the intergovernmental working group tasked to design
Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), as agreed at the UN Conference on
Sustainable Development ( Rio+20), held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, in June.
Rio+20 was attended by some 100
Heads of State and government, along with more than 40,000 representatives from
non-governmental organizations, the private sector and civil society, all
seeking to help shape new policies to promote global prosperity, reduce poverty
and advance social equity and environmental protection. At the end of the
gathering, participants agreed an outcome document which called for a wide
range of actions, such as beginning the process to establish SDGs.
“It is essential that the processes on SDGs
and the post-2015 development agenda are coherent with each other,” Ban said at
a briefing to the General Assembly on Tuesday on the outcomes of a recent
meeting of the Group of 20 (G20) leading economies in Los Cabos, Mexico. “This
will enable Member States to define a single global development framework with
sustainable development at its core.
The High-level Panels’ three
co-chairs are: President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono of Indonesia; President Ellen
Johnson Sirleaf of Liberia; and Prime Minister David Cameron of the United
Kingdom.
The remaining 23 panel members
are: Fulbert Gero Amoussouga of Benin, Vanessa Petrelli Corrêa of Brazil,
Yingfan Wang of China, Maria Angela Holguin of Colombia, Gisela Alonso of Cuba,
Jean-Michel Severino of France, Horst Kohler of Germany, Naoto Kan of Japan,
Queen Rania of Jordan, Betty Maina of Kenya, Abhijit Banerjee of India, Andris
Piebalgs of Latvia, Patricia Espinosa of Mexico, Paul Polman of the
Netherlands, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala of Nigeria, Elvira Nabiullina of the Russian
Federation, Graça Machel of South Africa, Sung-Hwan Kim of the Republic of
Korea, Gunilla Carlsson of Sweden, Emilia Pires of Timor-Leste, Kadir Topbas of
Turkey, John Podesta of the United States of America, Tawakkol Karman of Yemen.
In addition, the Secretary-General’s Special Advisor on Post-2015 Development
Planning, Amina J. Mohammed, will serve on the Panel in an ex officio capacity.
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