Third UN Conference on LDCs
7th Meeting (PM)
DEV/BRU/8
15 May 2001
PART
OF BRUSSELS CONFERENCE ON LEAST DEVELOPED COUNTRIES
The central role of cities and their leaders in global development efforts was emphasized today, as some 300 mayors from throughout the world discussed various aspects of city-to-city cooperation in a day-long meeting, as part of the Third United Nations Conference on Least Developed Countries, which is being held in Brussels, Belgium, from 14 to 20 May.
Anna Kajumulo Tibaijuka,
Executive Director of the United Nations Centre for Human Settlements
(Habitat), stressed at the outset of the event -- described as a “Meeting of
Mayors” -- that cities had a key role to play in efforts to fight poverty
throughout the world. While
globalization had placed many cities in a highly competitive framework, those
in least developed countries (LDCs) often lacked the experience and capacity to
compete. Key issues included: the ability of cities to access financial
assistance; and capacity-building through city-to-city cooperation.
If decentralization was to
work in LDC cities, local capacities must be strengthened, she said. The Habitat had worked extensively to
address that issue. Among the key
initiatives she cited was the Habitat II Conference (Istanbul, 1996), during
which issues of partnership and development in the face of urbanization had
been discussed.
Mark Malloch Brown,
Administrator of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), speaking at
the start of the second half of the day-long meeting, said it was absolutely
time that representatives of national governments meeting elsewhere in the
building were challenged by the expression of city-to-city cooperation being
seen here today.
The shift away from the countryside
to the mega-cities of the developing world was changing the face of poverty,
he said. In light of the great global
changes being seen -- including in the areas of finance, information technology
and trade -- cities emerged as the critical social and economic structures.
There was much that the international community could learn from cities
and their leaders, who had a great deal of specific knowledge about conditions
on the ground.
Eddy Boutmans, State Secretary for Development Cooperation of Belgium, said that, in a context of world society becoming ever more complex, local authorities were gaining in importance. Development could only succeed if it was based on grass-roots involvement and the participation of all involved. Countries only developed if their cities and villages were developing. There and decentralization must be accompanied by a real transfer of authority and resources.
Partnership between
developed and developing countries was not a one-way street, he
emphasized. It was based on the
conviction that both partners were contributing to a shared outcome.
Joan Clos, Mayor of
Barcelona, representing the World Association of Cities and Local Authorities,
pointed out that the cities of the world did not have their own status within
the United Nations system -- they were obliged to express themselves under the
banner of non-governmental organizations.
He called for a mechanism to make it possible for towns and cities to
speak under their own aegis in the United Nations context.
There was strong
determination on the part of most city associations to come together as valid
partners in the global dialogue, he said.
He stressed the need to have an international charter for local
government, which would greatly help with cooperation. He also recommended the establishment of
stable bilateral relationships between cities, in partnership with a financial
organization. This triangular
relationship would promote concrete and local development.
A representative of the
United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), which serves as
the United Nations focal point on LDCs, said the discussion today would have a
major impact on the results of the whole Conference. The United Nations wanted to diminish the number of LDCs, so that
if there was another conference in 10 years there would only be a few LDCs
left, if any. The President of the
United Republic of Tanzania had stressed yesterday the importance of ownership,
based on partnership, of the development process. The participants in today’s
meeting were a core part of the process.
During a discussion of the
methodology for city-to-city cooperation, representatives Quebec City, Canada,
Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, Lomé, Togo, Mainz, Germany, Freetown, Sierra Leone,
Bangkok, Thailand, among others, gave overviews of their experiences in
cooperating with other cities. It was
stressed that such cooperation provided excellent opportunities for an exchange
of information in a variety of areas, including skills and management
techniques. The importance of including
women in cooperation programmes was essential.
Success in programmes was based on the quality of the partnership and
coordination between the players.
The Mayor of Ouagadougou,
who is also President of the Federation of Cities in Burkina Faso, said his
city’s partnership with Quebec was a relationship of equals and contributed to
the advancement of citizenship on both sides.
Quebec’s Mayor, for his part, also stressed the reciprocal nature of the
relationship. It was important in cooperation
between cities to listen to differences, to respect each other’s backgrounds,
and to work together towards solutions.
An understanding of the aim of the cooperation exercise was key. It was also important to have an
understanding of how mutual financing and aid was used.
Lomé’s Mayor described his
city’s cooperation with Lyon, especially its technology exchange
programme. Lyon had given Lomé 10 buses
to help improve the public transportation system, he noted, in citing several
initiatives. A Mayor from Lommel,
Belgium, giving a description of his city’s partnership -- or “twinning” --
with Ongwediva,
Namibia, said ambition, comprehension, skill and
sustainability were needed to ensure a successful partnership.
City-to-city cooperation
could only be achieved if it was endorsed by those who governed, the Mayor of
Buenos Aires, Argentina, said, adding that more political than technical will
was needed. He called for solidarity
between the wealthy and less-wealthy cities.
Freetown’s mayor noted that his city’s partnership with Kingston upon
Hull, United Kingdom, had been the world’s first between the North and
South. He pointed out that the twinning
had continued in recent years, despite the conflict in his country.
Nigel Ringrose, an expert
from the UNDP, presented a UNDP study on “the challenge of linking”. He stressed the importance of careful
preparation before entering into partnerships.
Twinned cities should also avoid falling into traps, like thinking the
exercise would be easy or limiting the partnership to a simple arrangement
between two city halls -– all sectors of both societies should be
involved. Partnerships between cities,
even in North-South arrangements, were a “two-way street”, he noted. The material and spiritual benefits that
could be gained from twinning could be a powerful tool for peace.
When the discussion
shifted to support from governments and international institutions for
city-to-city cooperation, Shabbir Cheema of the UNDP said mayors were at the
frontline of the fight against poverty, providing, among other things, basic
services to the urban poor. To be
players in development efforts, cities must have a resource base, access to
information technology and substantial autonomy. Local dialogue among the various sectors in cities was also key.
Gilles Desesquelles,
European Commission, said new forms of cooperation for development were
needed. The Cotonou Agreement, which
was at present being ratified by the various parliaments of the European Union
and the African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) trade arrangement, should not
remain a document -- it must be implemented.
The new cooperation papers drawn up as a result of the Agreement were,
thus, being made available to non-governmental actors, including local
collectivities. Donors must reassess
their approach and find ways to ensure that local officers were the authors of
development efforts.
Edmundo Werna, United
Nations Volunteers (UNV), said his organization was very much interested in
activities involving solidarity between peoples –- and city-to-city cooperation
was such an instance. The UNV had
programme officers in many developing countries and could provide important
input to grass-roots development efforts, including in cities. The UNV was building its portfolio as a
partner in city-to-city cooperation through the support of individual projects
and also through larger initiatives.
Manuel Tornare, Councillor
of the City of Geneva, beginning the last segment of the meeting, on financing
cooperation initiatives, said poverty was the scourge of the next decade and
urban centres often paid a very heavy price in the face of globalization. The cities of Geneva, Switzerland, Lyon,
France, and Bamako, Mali, had set up an international solidarity fund for
cities, where financial support would go hand in hand with the transfer of
technical skills. The aim was to
contribute to the emergence of a new international tools in the fight against
poverty. The fund would be notable for
its impact on the everyday life of the beneficiaries, he noted. The initiative was the first time that local
authorities had decided to join at the international level to fight poverty.
Dominique Laurent of the
Union of Belgian Cities and Communities, introduced the Belgian Pilot Project,
which he said placed great emphasis on the role of local government in the
development process. The Project
embraced the concept of the world as a global village and decentralized
cooperation. Successful links between
cities had four main features -- necessary resources, broad participation,
mutual understanding and reciprocity. Presentations were also made during the
financing segment by a representative of Sister-Cities International, USA, and
Lyonnaise des Eaux.
Also during the meeting,
participants heard from, among others, representatives of the World Federation
of Cities, the International Union of Local Authorities, the Mayors Alliance
against HIV/AIDS in Africa, Citynet and Bremen Initiatives.
Freddy Thielemans,
Bourgmestre of Brussels, chaired the meeting and made opening remarks. Marie-Yves Pouponneau Duperval, Mayor of Port au
Prince, Haiti, served as vice-chair.
Mohan Cherifi, Coordinator
of the World Alliance of Cities against Poverty, presented a guide developed by
his organization and the UNDP on successful city-to-city cooperation.
The meeting of mayors will
continue at 9 a.m. tomorrow, 16 May.
*
*** *