Office of the President
of the Millennium Assembly
55th session of the United Nations General Assembly
Statement by
H.E. MR. HARRI HOLKERI
President of the General Assembly
Inaugural
Ceremony
Third United
Nations Conference on the Least Developed Countries
Brussels,
European Parliament, Plenary Hall
14 May 2001
Mr. President, Your Majesty,
Mr. Secretary General, Excellencies, Ladies and Gentlemen,
I am deeply honored to
address, in my capacity as President of the Millennium Assembly, the opening of
the Third United Nations Conference on the Least Developed Countries. This
Conference has been convened by the General Assembly, the chief policy-making and
representative organ of the United Nations. It is the first major UN conference
after last September's Millennium Summit, where our Heads of State and
Government adopted the Millennium Declaration and reaffirmed its ambitious
development goals.
The Millennium Declaration
is one of the most important UN documents of recent time. It brings together
the global development agenda of the 1990's. It reflects a unique consensus on
the values and principles of the international community. It represents the political
will of Member States. That political will must now prevail.
This week's Conference is
the first test whether Member States are truly committed to the implementation
of the Declaration. Perhaps the most important goal was to halve, by the year
2015, the proportion of the world's people who live in extreme poverty. Our
Heads of State and Government also addressed the special needs of the least
developed countries. They took upon themselves to ensure the success of this
Conference. They called on the industrialized countries to provide improved
market access, debt relief and development assistance to the LDCs.
Mr. President,
The Programme of Action that
you will adopt is extremely important for the United Nations. If it reflects a
determination to implement the goals of the Millennium Declaration, the
Programme's significance goes beyond the LDC context. It will strengthen the
credibility of the Declaration. It will encourage other major events to follow
suit. In the course of the next four months, five more special sessions or
major conferences will follow the LDC Conference. Their themes cover human
settlements, HIV/AIDS, small arms, racism and children. Next year, we will have
international conferences on financing for development and on sustainable
development. They all have been requested by the General Assembly to contribute
to the implementation of the Millennium Declaration. You can set an example of
how our common political will can prevail.
Adoption of an ambitious
Programme is not, however, enough. Its adoption must be followed by action by
LDC's and development partners alike. It is ultimately the Member States
themselves who bear the main responsibility for the implementation of the
Millennium Declaration.
In particular, the Programme
of Action must be followed by a cohesive response by the industrialized
countries. Most of the Ministers in this Hall representing donor countries are
responsible for development cooperation and trade. Ministers of finance are
conspicuously absent. As Delegations return home, many of them will face one
more hurdle, this time with their fellow cabinet members. I hope those present
here will prevail. It would also bode well for next year's International
Conference on Financing for Development.
Mr. President,
Action by the North must
have first priority also because the LDC's themselves have in so many cases
already walked the extra mile. They have gone by the book prescribed by the
North, too often without tangible rewards. We must maintain the faith of the LDCs
and their citizens in the promise of open trade, free markets and fiscal
restraint.
To conclude, let me once
again emphasize the central role of the United Nations General Assembly in the
follow-up to the Millennium Summit. To this end, the Assemly has asked to be
kept informed about how each major event and conference contributes to the
implementation of the Millennium Declaration. The Assembly, for its part, is
ready to endorse the Programme of Action as soon as so requested by the Member
States.