brian carroll on Tue, 4 Apr 2000 18:32:37 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> UN's IT vision |
[this Reuter's news piece of Kofi Annan's U.N. vision for the world has interesting applications of network technologies. i'm supposing the `e-mail this article to a friend' applies to nettime-l too. bc] http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/nm/20000403/ts/un_millennium_2.html Yahoo! News Story -- Annan Sets Ambitious Goals for New Millennium By Anthony Goodman UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - In a sweeping report prepared as a blueprint for a millennium U.N. summit, U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan set course on Monday for a 21st century born of benevolent globalization and human solidarity, with a big boost from the Internet. The report is studded with proposals for making good on many of the languishing ideals of the 55-year-old U.N. Charter. They range from halving the proportion of the world's population --- currently 22 percent -- existing on less than a dollar a day by the year 2015, to halting and reversing by then the scourge of AIDS. U.N. members also are called on to commit themselves to ensuring that by 2015 all children complete primary schooling and that the gender gap is eliminated at all levels of education. The 58-page document, presented to the 188-nation U.N. General Assembly, is intended to form the basis of discussion for what is billed as the biggest gathering of world leaders at a Millennium U.N. Summit set for Sept. 6-8. ``We must put people at the center of everything we do. No calling is more noble, and no responsibility greater, than that of enabling men, women and children, in cities and in villages around the world, to make their lives better,'' Annan wrote. In the most sweeping redefinition of the world organization's mission since its founding in 1945, Annan set ambitious goals for a planet whose population has more than doubled since then -- from fewer than 2.5 billion to 6 billion people. It is also a world body, he noted, whose work habits are now dictated by the communications revolution rather than the leisurely sailing schedules of ocean liners that once brought diplomats to New York. ``The Internet is the fastest growing instrument of communication in the history of civilization, and it may be the most rapidly disseminating tool of any kind ever,'' said Annan, now in the fourth year of his five-year term. Series of Initiatives Announced Among the initiatives he announced were: -- a volunteer corps called the United Nations Information Technology Service (UNITeS) to train groups in developing countries how to use information technology; -- a Health InterNetwork to establish 10,000 online sites in hospitals and clinics in developing countries to provide access to the latest medical information; -- a disaster response initiative, ``First on the Ground,'' led Ericsson (LMEb.ST) communications, to provide uninterrupted communications to areas hit by natural disasters; -- and a global network to explore new approaches to youth employment. Despite its promise, globalization has begun to generate a backlash, Annan said, because its benefits and opportunities appeared highly concentrated among a relatively small number of countries, and were spread unevenly within them. ``Thus the central challenge we face today is to ensure that globalization becomes a positive force for all the world's people, instead of leaving billions of them behind in squalor,'' he said. Introducing his report to the General Assembly on Monday, Annan asked: ``How can we say that the half of the human race which has yet to make or receive a telephone call, let alone use a computer, is taking part in globalization? We cannot without insulting their poverty.'' Listing global issues under the headings of freedom from want, freedom from fear and the freedom of future generations to sustain their lives on this planet, he said the last was not clearly identified in the U.N. Charter ``because in 1945 our founders could scarcely imagine that it would ever be threatened.'' ``If I could sum it up in one sentence, I should say we are plundering our children's heritage to pay for our present unsustainable practices,'' Annan said, calling for the reduction of ``greenhouse gases'' responsible for global warming. Many of his proposals aim at attaining long-standing objectives, including free access to markets for goods from poor countries; an expansion of debt-relief programs for the most heavily burdened; and cooperation with pharmaceutical companies and others to develop an affordable vaccine for AIDS. In the age-old fight against the scourge of war, Annan urged all countries to sign and honor treaties in the fields of arms control and international and human rights law. He specifically referred to the statute of an International Criminal Court, which too few countries have so far ratified to enable it to enter into force and about which the United States has strong reservations. Other goals include: -- strengthening the capacity of the United Nations to conduct peace operations -- more of which are now being launched; -- targeting sanctions against delinquent rulers rather than innocent populations -- an issue that has come to prominence in the case of Iraq; and -- curbing the illegal traffic in small arms that fuel innumerable wars. Referring to two principles that the United Nations has yet to harmonize -- and which came to the fore with the Kosovo crisis -- Annan told the Assembly: ``National sovereignty offers vital protection to small and weak states, but it should not be a shield for crimes against humanity.'' ``In extreme cases the clash of these two principles confronts us with a real dilemma, and the Security Council may have a moral duty to act on behalf of the international community. But in most cases the international community should be able to preserve peace by measures which do not infringe state sovereignty,'' he said. Copyright � 2000 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. 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