Third UN Conference on LDCs
9th Meeting (AM)
DEV/BRU/10
16 May 2001
A group of more than 200 mayors from throughout the world formally committed themselves today to the fight against poverty in their cities and expressed their determination to actively promote city-to-city cooperation, at the Third United Nations Conference on Least Developed Countries, being held in Brussels.
Adopting
a declaration at the conclusion of a day-and-a-half-long “Meeting of Mayors”,
the participants took special note of the particular structural difficulties
facing cities in least developed countries (LDCs), as well as the poor living
in them, and stressed that combating urban poverty was a shared
commitment. They also decided that all
of their future action plans would make special provisions to address the needs
of the poorest members of their societies, with an emphasis on women, children
and the aged.
They
emphasized their intention to ensure the involvement of all affected citizens
in putting together measures to address their situation and called on
governments to address the situation of LDCs and the urban poor by a variety of
measures, including debt cancellation and increased aid.
In another major outcome
of the session, which sought to facilitate contacts between cities wishing to
enter into partnerships, several announcements were made about the possibility
of initiating formal city-to-city cooperative agreements. Also, the World Bank explained its City
Alliance Initiative, and a representative of the United Nation Conference on
Trade and Development (UNCTAD) announced a project that will allow cities to
use the Internet for development purposes.
That project will be presented more fully by UNCTAD on Friday.
Announcing possible cooperation agreements were: the Mayor of Port au Prince, Haiti, who said she had received indications of a desire for cooperation with certain cities in Madagascar; the Mayor of Banjoul, Gambia, who noted that discussions for cooperation had begun with Ostend, Belgium; the Mayor of Brussels, Belgium, who announced that he had had contacts with the cities of Kigali, Rwanda, Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Dakar, Senegal, and others; and the Mayor of Freetown, Sierra Leone, who said he had established points of reference for future cooperation with Brussels.
The World Bank’s representative said the City Alliance Initiative -- a joint project of the Bank and the United Nations Centre for Human Settlements (Habitat), with Nelson Mandela as its patron -- is a global coalition of cities and their development partners, designed to improve the living conditions of the urban poor through city development strategies and the implementation of slum-upgrading programmes. Thus far, some 20 countries had received $4 million in assistance. The Initiative brought together all the various players as equal partners, promoted the exchange of knowledge and provided a window to promote local initiatives
Mamadou Diop, Mayor of
Dakar, Senegal, rapporteur of the meeting, presented a report on the session’s
proceedings and noted that, despite ongoing difficulties related to financing
and autonomy, the current world environment favoured the emergence of
city-to-city cooperation. A number of
new forms of cooperation with different objectives and methods of implementation
were emerging. A new way of thinking
about how cities functioned and how the social relations within them were
elaborated must be undertaken. Cities
must play a fundamental role in the worldwide fight against poverty.
In his
concluding remarks to the participants, Rubens Ricupero, Secretary-General of
UNCTAD, said the problems in LDCs and developing countries in general were more
and more becoming urban problems, and that would accelerate in the future. The challenges faced by LDCs could only be
understood if the position of towns and cities, which were excellent examples
of human cooperation, was considered.
The size of cities was clearly a problem -- certainly that could not be
forgotten. At the same time, cities
presented amazing opportunities for cultural fulfilment. He then gave an overview of a Brazilian
initiative to encourage children to attend school by offering financial
incentives to their parents.
Presentations on the
challenges facing their cities were made by the Mayors of Dhaka, Bangladesh;
Port au Prince, Haiti; and Kampala, Uganda.
Representatives of Brussels and the International Association of
French-Speaking Mayors also spoke, as did the Mayor of Huy, Belgium, who is
also an independent expert on extreme poverty from the United Nations Human
Rights Commission,
Freddy Thielemans,
Bourgmestre of Brussels, chaired the meeting and made concluding remarks.
Mohan Cherifi, Coordinator of the World Alliance of Cities against Poverty, noted that all requests for cooperation made would be forwarded to the relevant world cooperative networks so that no one would leave the meeting empty handed.
The next parallel event, a
round-table discussion by members of the business sector, will begin at 2 p.m.
today.
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