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Trillion Pledge To Rescue The World’s Poorest

Issue 375
Front Page
News Headlines

Minister Of Health Says Some People Are Using Religion As Propaganda Against Vaccination

Somaliland Foreign Minister Addresses UK International Conference On ‘Sovereignty’

Somaliland Youth Risk Death In Search Of Better Life

“No Legitimate Government After 6th April” Says Kulmiye Party

Food Aid Imports Enter Via Berbera Port
Local and Regional Affairs
Opposition Parties Reject Guurti Extension and Say They Do Not Recognize Rayale As a President Come April 06th

“We urge the distinguished Somaliland’s upper Parliament chamber-the Guurti to immediately reverse their decision”

Man claims in video to be US jihadist in Somalia
U.S. Embassy Celebrates Somali Women
Kenya: Stop Forced Returns to Somalia
Four Puntland Journalists Detained At Somaliland Airport
SOMALIA: Getting tough on foreign vessels to save local fishermen

Somali Child Health Days go nationwide for the first time

Africa: Death Toll in Migrant Ship Sinking Passes 230
Somalia's New Govt Receives $18m Donation At Arab Summit
Editorial

What Does The Upper House Vote Tell Us?

Features & Commentry

Somali Pirates Undeterred By Naval Build-Up, But Risks Heightened

Q & A With Somali Foreign Minister Muhammad Abdillahi Omar

Somalia: Shoot, But Don't Touch

Piracy Brings Rich Booty To Somalia

Transnational Islamic Extremism – Myth Or Reality?

International News

 

Obama Strategy For Afghanistan And Pakistan Receives High Marks

Obama to Announce Push For Nuclear Disarmament

Donors Assess Global Fund Resource Needs
Trillion Pledge To Rescue The World’s Poorest

Opinion

Somaliland’s Constitutional Argument
Somaliland Election Delayed—So Did Its Recognition
Let Us Appreciate To Hargeysa Readers Club
Cry Mother Somaliland Cry

Independence Of Somaliland: Good Or Bad For Somalia?

Djibouti Doctors are finally calling the shots!
Another Setback For Somaliland Democracy
Motor Oil Can Cause Environmental Damages

April 3, 2009 ()- General Ban Ki-moon today welcomed the $1.1 trillion package committed by leaders of the Group of 20 (G-20) nations in London, stressing that developing nations must receive the funds needed to stem the onset of a human development crisis.
The G-20 nations today also “reaffirmed previous commitments to increase aid and help countries achieve the Millennium Development Goals,” Mr. Ban said in a statement, referring to the ambitious anti-poverty targets with a 2015 deadline.
This means that these nations are promising at least $300 billion in aid over the next two years, he said. “For the poorest countries this will be crucial. The world will be watching.”
According to new World Bank data, developing countries’ economic growth will slow sharply to 2.1 per cent this year, marking a 3 per cent drop from 2008. As a result, some 53 million more people would fall into poverty this year, living on less than $1.25 a day, due to the crisis.
Additionally, the world economy will contract by 1.7 per cent compared to last year’s 1.9 per cent growth, making the first global decline since the Second World War.
The G-20 leaders committed considerable new resources for the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank, and asked the UN to monitor the impacts of the current and future crises on the world’s most vulnerable, the Secretary-General added. “I welcome the commitment from G-20 leaders to resist protectionism and to monitor compliance,” he said, noting that he was also encouraged by their recognition of the strong links between tackling the economic turmoil, food security and climate change.
Among other things, the leaders also committed to combating climate change, vowing to reach agreement at the UN climate change conference this December in Copenhagen, where nations are expected to conclude an ambitious successor pact to the Kyoto Protocol, whose first commitment period ends in 2012.
In an opinion piece published in The Guardian today, the Secretary-General made the case for $1 trillion to “stop the slide” and help the world’s poorest, who spend as much as 80 per cent of their income on food and have no safety net.
“One trillion dollars over two years is not so large a sum, considering the consequences,” he said. “Some might call it a moral imperative. But if our goal is to reverse a global slump, it is also sound economics.”
The financial crisis has spiralled into an economic crisis, he wrote. “I fear worse to come: a full-blown political crisis defined by growing social unrest, weakened governments and angry publics who have lost all faith in their leaders and their own future.”
Mr. Ban appealed to nations to recognize their global interdependence, with no single nation being able to safeguard its economic security without taking into account the well-being of other countries. “There is a thin line between failing banks and failing countries, and we cross it at our peril.”
Boosting liquidity through the IMF is key to reverse the credit crunch impacting developing nations which has retarded trade and growth, Mr. Ban underscored.
“Meanwhile, we must resist short-sighted pressures that would compromise, if not destroy, the progress we make in London – and say no to the new protectionism,” the Secretary-General wrote, calling on nations who have placed restrictions on trade to reverse the trend. While in London, the Secretary-General held bilateral meetings today with Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi and Japanese Prime Minister Taro Aso. Tomorrow he heads to Paris, where he will chair a meeting of the UN system’s Chief Executives Board for Coordination (CEB).
Source: SCOOP
 

 


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