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LAUNCHING
OF THE UN MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT PROJECT REPORT
BY HIS EXCELLENCY THE PRESIDENT,
ALHAJI DR AHMAD TEJAN KABBAH
AT THE MIATTA CONFERENCE CENTRE,
BROOKFIELDS
ON MONDAY 24TH JANUARY 2005
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Mr.
Chairman
Cabinet Ministers
Honourable Members of Parliament
Members of the Diplomatic and Consular Corps
Mayor of Freetown and Chairman of Local Councils
Heads of International Organisations
Distinguished Ladies and Gentlemen:
Today's
launching of the Millennium Development Project
Report provides an opportunity for me to reaffirm
a commitment I made five years ago, as President
to protect the people of Sierra Leone from debilitating
ills such as extreme hunger, poverty and disease,
by pursuing policies that are primarily designed
to reduce poverty by half by the year 2015. This
commitment, which was jointly made on behalf of
the world's poor by world leaders, is known as
the Millennium Declaration. The Declaration encapsulates
eight (8) Development Goals which are commonly
referred to as the MDGs. These goals have been
thoroughly highlighted by previous speakers here
today.
There
has been considerable debate of all shades on
the ambitious nature of the MDGs. There are those
who say that the Millennium Development Goals
(MDGs) are unachievable, and will thus forever
remain a dream. I hold a different viewpoint.
Though the challenge that lies ahead is difficult,
I am heartened by the fact that the MDGs represent
tangible benchmarks toward which nations such
as ours can aim. They establish yardsticks for
measuring results, not just for developing countries
but also for rich countries that help to fund
development programs and for the multilateral
institutions that help countries implement them.
The
five year review of the MDGs reminds us that we
in Sierra Leone lost ground due largely to our
protracted and destructive civil conflict. We
should nonetheless be commended as we have made
considerable progress, as evident in the Vision
2025 document, the National Recovery Strategy
and above all the recently finalized Poverty Reduction
Strategy.
Despite
the laudable efforts of many Governments, the
harsh reality for sub-Sahara Africa is that achieving
the MDGs is a monumental challenge. Indeed, this
is what prompted the United Nation's Secretary
General to take the bold step of commissioning
the Millennium Development Project three (3) years
ago. As you all know the goal of the project was
to develop a comprehensive strategy for the attainment
of the MDGs. This effort has been spearheaded
by an international team of eminent development
experts, policy makers and academics. It is hoped
that their efforts, which have culminated in this
report, will re-focus global awareness towards
the plight of poor people, towards our individual
responsibilities as low-income countries and also
towards the need for developed countries to provide
adequate and predictable levels of development
assistance.
The
individual responsibilities, which leaders like
myself are addressing, include good governance,
gender equity, sound financial management, accountability
and transparency in our dealings with both our
people and our development partners. These factors
play a major role in determining the plight of
our people.
Instruments
and avenues for much-needed and appropriate international
interventions already exist through Overseas Development
Assistance (ODA). Unfortunately however the current
level of assistance provided globally hovers around
only one-third of the agreed target of 0.7% of
the combined Gross National Income of developed
countries. A further difficulty lies in debt servicing,
which continues to cripple low-income developing
countries. Some of these nations spend 3 to 5
times more funds on debt servicing than they do
on the provision of basic social services to their
citizens. With such a skewed balance of fiscal
expenditures it is extremely difficult to adequately
address the plight of the poor while attempting
to maintain macro-economic stability.
I
have often commended the international community
for the HIPC Initiative, which remains the most
comprehensive and fast-tract route to solving
the debt crisis. However for most countries, it
has been shown that even the enhanced version
of HIPC provides an inadequate level of relief.
This continued debt dilemma, coupled with the
seeming impossibility of low-income countries
to gain meaningful and equitable access to developed
country markets clearly illustrates that the road
ahead remains rocky.
For
our part, in Sierra Leone I have initiated several
specific reforms geared towards facilitating the
achievement of the MDGs. As I stated earlier,
my Government continues to ensure that our national
strategies, embodied in the Vision 2025 document,
the National Recovery Strategy, and the National
Poverty Reduction Strategy, are also geared towards
facilitating the achievement of the MDGs.
Above
all our strategy during the war was that while
prosecuting the war, we were also planning the
recovery and reconstruction phase by designing
projects for this phase. We are now at the stage
of mobilising the necessary resources to implement
all the projects that we have so far designed
particularly in the sectors covered in the Millennium
Development Goals. If we are able to sustain the
interest and support of our international partners,
and continue to pursue prudent policies and strategies
we will be on track to achieve Goal Number (2)
of universal primary education.
At
the regional level, we are actively engaged in
NEPAD and the African Union Initiative, that provide
a platform through which we can continue to lobby
our counterparts in the developed world for their
inputs in the implementation of recovery programmes
in Africa. Moreover, my Government is intensifying
its efforts within ECOWAS towards achieving these
goals at a sub-regional level.
Mr.
Chairman, I note with delight that the completion
of the Millennium Development Project Report coincides
with the completion of our PRSP, which is Sierra
Leone's major vehicle for achieving the MDGs.
Hence it is our hope that this coincidence serves
as a positive indicator of future success in accessing
the funds required for the implementation of Sierra
Leone's PRS when discussed at the forthcoming
CG meeting scheduled for mid 2005.
In
summary, I wish to underscore that the Millennium
Development Goals are the most broadly supported
specific poverty reduction targets ever established.
Their significance to low-income countries such
as Sierra Leone cannot be over-emphasized. I trust
that the analyses, strategies, and recommendations
provided in the Report will guide individual country
implementation and surely enhance the achievement
of the goals within the context of country specific
material and human capacity. This report addressed
the uneven achievements of the goals and has brought
into focus the special circumstances of the various
regions, their economies, inadequacies and strengths.
It provides a blueprint for assisting in the achievement
of the MDGs and thus keeping the plight of the
poor on the global agenda. Let me therefore commend
the work of the Millennium Development Project
in paving the way forward for the realization
of the MDGs.
Finally
I wish to commend, and note our appreciation to,
all the experts for their praise-worthy efforts.
Special recognition must be given to the UN Secretary-General,
Kofi Annan for commissioning the UN Millennium
Project and for playing an unparalleled role in
promoting the global fight against poverty. I
now wish to personally thank the UN Country Team,
under the leadership of Mr. Victor Angelo, for
its contribution towards Sierra Leone's development
efforts.
I
thank you all for your attention.
-End-
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