Sustaining Our Future
The Millennium Report of the UN Secretary -General
By KOFI ANNAN
NEW CENTURY, NEW CHALLENGES
The new millennium, and the Millennium Summit, offer the world's peoples a unique
occasion to reflect on their common destiny, at a moment when they before. They
look to their leaders to identify and act on the challenges ahead. The United
Nations can help meet those challenges, if its Members share a renewed sense
of mission. Founded to introduce new principle into international relations
in 1945, the UN has succeeded better in some areas than others. This is a chance
to reshape the United Nations so that it can make a real and measurable difference
to people's lives in the new century.
GLOBALIZATION AND GOVERNANCE
The benefits of globalization are obvious: faster growth, higher living standards,
new opportunities. Yet a backlash has begun, because these benefits are so unequally
distributed, and because the global market is not yet underpinned by rules based
on shared social objectives.
In 1945 the founders set up an open and cooperative system for an international
world. This system worked, and made it possible for globalization to emerge.
As a result we now live in a global world. Responding to this shift is a central
challenge for world leaders today.
In this new world, groups and individuals more and more often interact directly
across frontiers, without involving the State. This has its dangers. Crime,
narcotics, terrorism, pollution, disease, weapons, refugees and migrants:
All move back and forth faster and in greater number than in the past. People
feel threatened by events far away. They are also more aware of injustice and
brutality in distant countries, and expect states to do something about them.
But new technologies also create opportunities for mutual understanding and
common action. If we are to get the best out of globalization and avoid the
worst, we must learn to govern better, and how to govern better together.
That does not mean world government or the eclipse of nation states. On the
contrary, states need to be strengthened. And they can draw strength from each
other, by acting together within common institutions based on shared rules and
values. These institutions must reflect the realities of the time, including
the distribution of power. And the must serve as an arena for states to cooperate
with nonstate actors, including global companies. In many cases they need to
be complemented by less formal policy networks, which can respond more quickly
to the changing global agenda.
The gross disparities of wealth in today's world, the miserable conditions in
which well over a billion people live, the prevalence of endemic conflict in
some regions, and the rapid degradation of the natural environment: all these
combine to make the present model of development unsustainable, unless remedial
measures are taken by common agreement. A recent survey of public opinion across
six continents the largest ever conducted confirms that such measures are what
people want.
FREEDOM FROM WANT
The past half century has seen unprecedented economic gains. But 1.2 billion
people have to live on less than $1 a day. The combination of extreme poverty
with extreme inequality between countries, and often also within them, is an
affront to our common humanity. It also makes many other problems worse, including
conflict. And the world's population is still rising rapidly, with the increase
concentrated in the poorest countries. We must act to reduce extreme poverty
by half
Achieving sustained growth. This means, above all, ensuring that people in all
developing countries can benefit from globalization.
Generating opportunities for the young. By 2015, all children must complete
primary schooling, with equal opportunities for both genders at all levels of
education; and ways must be found to provide young people with decent work.
Promoting health and combating HIV/AIDS. Health research must be redirected
at the problems affecting 90 per cent of the world's people. By 2010 we should
have cut the rate of HIV infection in young people by 25 per cent.
Upgrading the slums. We must support the "Cities without Slums" action
plan, which aims to improve the lives of 100 million slum dwellers by 2020.
Including Africa. The Report challenges experts and philanthropic foundations
to tackle low agricultural productivity in Africa. It also urges African governments
to give higher priority to reducing poverty, and the rest of the world to help
them.
Building digital bridges. New technology offers an unprecedented chance for
developing countries to "leapfrog" earlier stages of development.
Everything must be done to maximize their people's access to new information
networks.
Demonstrating global solidarity.
Rich countries must further open their markets to poor countries products, must
provide deeper and faster debt relief, and must give more and better focused
development assistance. Ridding the world of the scourge of extreme poverty
is a challenge to every one of us. We must not fail to meet it.
FREEDOM FROM FEAR
Wars between States have become less frequent. But in the last decade internal
wars have claimed more than 5 million lives, and driven many times that number
of people from their homes. At the same time weapons of mass destruction continue
to cast their shadow of fear. We now think of security less as defending territory,
more in terms of protecting people. The threat of deadly conflict must be tackled
at every stage:
Prevention. Conflicts are most frequent in poor countries, especially in those
that are ill governed and where there are sharp inequalities between ethnic
or religious groups. The best way to prevent them is to promote healthy and
balanced economic development, combined with human rights, minority rights and
political arrangements in which all groups are fairly represented. Also, illicit
transfers of weapons, money, or natural resources must be forced into the limelight.
Protecting the vulnerable. We must find better ways to enforce international
and human rights law, and ensure that gross violations do not go unpunished.
Addressing the dilemma of intervention. National sovereignty must not be used
as a shield for those who wantonly violate the rights and lives of their fellow
human beings. In the face of mass murder, armed intervention authorized by the
Security Council is an option that cannot be relinquished.
Strengthening peace operations.
The Millennium Assembly is invited to consider recommendations from a high level
panel the Secretary General has established to review all aspects of peace operations.
Targeting sanctions. Recent research has explored ways to make sanctions "smarter",
by targeting them better. The Security Council should draw on this research
when designing and applying sanctions regimes in future.
Pursuing arms reductions.
The Secretary General urges Member States to control small arms transfers more
rigorously; and to recommit themselves to reducing the dangers both of existing
nuclear weapons and of further proliferation.
SUSTAINING OUR FUTURE
We now face an urgent need to secure the freedom of future generations to sustain
their lives on this planet and we are failing to do it. We have been plundering
our children's heritage to pay for unsustainable practices. Changing this is
a challenge of rich and poor countries alike. The Rio Conference in 1992 provided
the foundations, and the Montreal Protocol on ozone depleting substances is
an important step forward. But elsewhere our responses are too few, too little
and too late. Before 2002 we must revive the debate and prepare to act decisively
in the following areas:
Coping with climate change.
Reducing the threat of global warming requires a 60 per cent reduction in emissions
of carbon and other "greenhouse gases". This can be achieved by promoting
energy efficiency and relying more on renewable energy sources. Implementing
the 1997 Kyoto Protocol would be a first step.
Confronting the water crisis. The report urges endorsement of the World Water
Forum Ministerial Conference's target of cutting by half the proportion of people
without access to safe and affordable water before 2015. It also calls for a
"Blue Revolution" which would increase agricultural productivity per
unit of water, while improving management of watersheds and flood plains.
Defending the soil. The best hope of feeding a growing world population from
shrinking agricultural land may lie in biotechnology, but its safety and environmental
impact are hotly debated. The Secretary General is convening a global policy
network to try and resolve these controversies, so that the poor and hungry
do not lose out.
Preserving forests, fisheries, and biodiversity. In all these areas, conservation
is vital. Government and the private sector must work together to support it.
Building a new ethic of stewardship. The Secretary General recommends four priorities;
1) Education of the public;
2) "Green accounting", to integrate the environment into economic
policy;
3) Regulations and incentives;
4) More accurate scientific data.
Peoples, as well as Governments, must commit themselves to a new ethic of conservation
and stewardship.
RENEWING THE UNITED NATIONS
Without a strong UN, it will be much harder to meet all these challenges. Strengthening
the UN depends on Governments, and especially on their willingness to work with
others the private sector, nongovernmental organizations and multilateral agencies
to find consensus solutions. The UN must act as a catalyst, to stimulate action
by others. And it must fully exploit the new technologies, especially information
technology. The Secretary General recommends action in these areas:
Identifying our core strengths.
The UN's influence derives not from power, but from the values it represents,
it represents, its role in helping to set and sustain global norms, its ability
to stimulate global concern and action; and the trust inspired by its practical
work to improve people's lives. We must build on those strengths, especially
by insisting on the importance of the rule of law. But we also need to adapt
the UN itself, notably by reforming the Security Council so it can both work
effectively and enjoy unquestioned legitimacy.
And we must expand the UN's relationship with civil society organizations, as
well as with the private sector and foundations.
Networking for change. We must supplement formal institutions with informal
policy networks, bringing together international institutions, civil society
and private sector organizations, and national governments, in pursuit of common
goals.
Making digital connections. We can use the new information technology to make
the UN more efficient, and to improve its interaction with the rest of the world.
But to do so we must overcome a change resistant culture. The Secretary General
is asking the information technology industry to help us do it.
Advancing the quiet revolution.
To meet he needs of the 21st century we need real structural reform, a clearer
consensus on priorities among Member States, and less intrusive oversight of
day to day management. Decisions are needed from the General Assembly for instance
to include "sunset provisions" in new mandates and to introduce results
based budgeting.
FOR CONSIDERATION BY THE SUMMIT
The Secretary General lists six shared values, reflecting the spirit of the
Charter, which are of particular relevance to the new century: Freedom; Equity
and Solidarity; Tolerance; Non-Violence; Respect for Nature; and Shared Respon-sibility.
He urges the Millennium Summit to adopt a series of resolutions, drawn from
the body of the Report, as an earnest of its will to act on those values.
Note:
Published by the United Nations Department of Public Information, DPI/2107A-March
2000.
The full report is available at www.un.org/millenium/sg/report; or contact the
United Nations Secretariat, Documents Unit, at 212-963-7367/8.