
ICYO - Youth Information
November 2006 – I
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News and views from Indian Committee of Youth Organizations
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ICYO - Platform of 356 Youth Organizations in India.
ICYO - India’s largest network of urban and rural youth.
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UN Chief Says
Youth Key to Poverty Fight
UNITED
NATIONS, - With less than two months before he steps down as secretary-general
after a long 10-year tenure, Kofi Annan is disappointed that the international
community is lagging behind in its much-touted Millennium Development Goals
(MDGs), including a 50 percent reduction in extreme poverty and hunger by 2015.
"Even
though every government endorsed the Millennium Development Goals," he
says, "We are not making faster progress as we wanted."
At
this rate, he warns, many of the goals will not be met, "so we need to
re-affirm our commitment to these goals," which also include achieving
universal primary education and combating HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseases.
As
part of this process of re-commitment, the United Nations has turned to the
world's younger generation to increase awareness of the MDGs, and to help spread
the word at the grassroots level.
A
declaration adopted Tuesday at the conclusion of a three-day Global Youth
Leadership Summit -- described as one of the largest assemblies of youth --
called on all 192 U.N. member states to fulfill commitments made at the U.N.
Millennium Summit in September 2000.
"The
older generation of leaders from around the world endorsed the Millennium
Development Goals for 2015," said Djibril Diallo, chair of the summit,
"but it will take the full commitment and talents of the younger
generation to help achieve them."
According
to the United Nations, younger people represent one-fourth of the world's six
billion people, of which 86 percent live in the developing world.
The
United Nations estimates that one in five youth live on less than a dollar a
day, and about 45 percent live on less than two dollars a day.
Diallo
described the summit as a "landmark event" because the 400 young
delegates, ages 16 to 30, who came from 192 countries, will return to their
home countries "as spokespersons for MDGs reaching out to their peers and
new partners to take action to help achieve the MDGs".
At
a press briefing Tuesday, Diallo told reporters that the United Nations had
organised the summit as a way to create an interaction between generations,
which was essential for the progress of the MDGs.
"All
indications were that, unless something was done, many countries would not
reach the MDGs by 2015, and the United Nations recognized the importance of the
role of youth in that effort," he added.
As
he surveyed the cavernous auditorium of the United Nations on the opening day
of the summit, Annan declared that "this is the liveliest General Assembly
Hall I've seen."
He
reminded the young delegates that there are still more than a billion people
living on less than a dollar a day. Three billion survive on less than two
dollars a day, he said, and more than 100 million school-aged children are not
in school.
Seven
thousand young people become infected with HIV/AIDS. Every day, almost 30,000
children die of poverty. "These are grim statistics, but there are human
faces behind them," Annan said.
"All
that can be changed, if we work together to meet the Millennium Development
Goals, we work together to fight poverty and if we all work together -- the
governments, the private sector, non-governmental organisations (NGOs) -- to
achieve the Millennium Development Goals, the blueprint agreed by all
governments in the hope of creating a better tomorrow in the twenty-first
century," Annan added.
He
also told the assembly of youth: "That is where you, the young leaders,
come in. Your voice and your organisation, activity and energy can hold leaders
to those pledges that they have made."
"I
know you will not resign yourselves to a world where others die of hunger,
remain illiterate and lack human dignity. We need to work in partnership with
governments, the private sector and civil society," Annan declared.
Organised
by the U.N. Office of Sport for Development and Peace, the summit was supported
by Senegalese President Abdoulaye Wade, and leaders of several charitable
foundations and business organisations, including Mohan Lal Mittal, head of the
Gita-Mohan Mittal Foundation, Hiroshi Matsumoto, president of the Inner Trip
Reiyukai International (ITRI), a transnational NGO based in India and Japan,
and John Gage of the U.S.-based Sun Microsystems.
"Having
grown up in a tiny village of Rajasthan in India, and coming from a modest
background, I have had first-hand experience of understanding the lack of basic
necessities that people face in many other regions of the world," said
Mittal, who is also patriarch of India's Mittal Steel Empire.
He
said fighting poverty should not just be the purview of governments,
international institutions or the private sector.
"Rather,
we need to devise creative and pragmatic partnerships that improve economies,
create businesses, build education systems and increase health care
services," he noted.
Asked
about the participation of the private sector, Diallo told reporters the United
Nations always carefully studied its potential business partners to be sure
they met ethical standards.
Last
year, a 265-member team called the Millennium Task Force unveiled a global plan
of action aimed at reducing poverty by half and radically improving the lives
of at least one billion people by the year 2015.
A
summary of the voluminous 3,000-page project, titled "A Practical Plan to
Achieve the Millenniun Development Goals (MDGs)", listed a series of
recommendations -- some of which were labeled "quick wins".
These
include: the free mass distribution of malaria bed nets which can save the
lives of up to one million children per year in sub-Saharan Africa; and ending
user fees for primary schools and essential health services, compensated by
increased donor aid as necessary.
At
a much broader level, the recommendations also included the opening of
high-income country markets to developing country exports; the creation of
ambitious national development strategies; an increase in regional trade among
poorer nations; elimination of debt; the provision of better quality aid; and a
hefty increase in official development assistance (ODA).
But
most of these recommendations remain unimplemented. (Inter Press Service/PUSH
Journal)
Youth Information is published by
Indian Committee of Youth Organizations (ICYO)
194-A, Arjun Nagar, Safdarjang Enclave
New Delhi 110029, India
Phone: 91 9811729093 / 91 11 26183978 Fax 91 11
26198423
Email: icyoindia@... / icyo@...
Web: www.icyo.in
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Indian
Committee of Youth Organizations (ICYO) is a registered non-profit,
non-governmental network organization, committed in developing areas of mutual
cooperation and understanding among different youth voluntary agencies, youth
groups, clubs and individuals working in the field of youth welfare in
India.
ICYO
functions as an umbrella organization of youth NGOs in India. It's family
consists of
over 356 organizations spread in 122 districts of 22 states from different
corners of India.
Our goal:
To improve and
extend the youth work and services through Youth Organizations;
To enhance and demonstrate youth work in the society;
To promote effective youth programmmes;
To organize network of civil society organizations working towards the
development of youth work;
To organize seminars, conferences, workshops, trainings;
To maintain international relation with organizations promoting young people in
their programmes and activities
Affiliation:
Consultative (Roster) Status with ECOSOC, United Nations;
Consultative Status with Commission on Sustainable Development;
Full Member of World Assembly of Youth (WAY); Asian Youth Council (AYC);
Youth for Habitat International Network (YFHIN); CRIN, South Asia Youth
Environment Network (SAYEN), Affiliate group of ECPAT International, Thailand;
ATSECE-DELHI, Indian Partner of AIDS Care Watch Campaign;
Steering Committee member of World Bank's
YDP Network;
Working relation with Indian Association of Parliamentarians (IAPPD);
International Medical Parliamentarians Organizations (IMPO);
Asian Forum of Parliamentarians on Population and Development (AFPPD);
World Youth Foundation, Malaysia.