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Roundup: Deputy UN chief stresses global efforts for eradicating poverty, full employment

Xinhua, June 9, 2015 Adjust font size:

Deputy UN Secretary-General Jan Eliasson on Monday spoke at the 20th anniversary commemoration of the World Summit for Social Development, stressing global efforts to strive for eradicating poverty, full employment and social integration across the world.

He said that "in 1995 in Copenhagen, participants at the Summit agreed that we must place human beings at the center of our development efforts," adding that "the affirmation that poverty eradication, full employment and social integration are closely linked rings even more relevant and true in today's world."

Eliasson said that "as we strengthen and reinforce our combined commitment to achieve a life of dignity for all, we must use the lessons of the past to ensure a better future for all."

"The year 2015 presents an historic test and challenge for the international community and national institutions," he said.

"We are embarking on a voyage of transformative change affecting all sectors of our societies," he said. "This change must be built on universality, sustainability and acceptance of interdependence as a win-win proposition for both nations and people."

In March 1995 in Copenhagen, Eliasson said, the World Summit for Social Development was the largest gathering ever of world leaders at that time. By putting people center stage, the summit pledged to make the conquest of poverty, the goal of full employment and the fostering of social integration overriding objectives of development.

"Today's event gives us an opportunity for reflection on progress ... as well as on remaining challenges and the road ahead, " especially in promoting social progress, social inclusion and social justice, he said. "Peoples'needs, rights and aspirations are the glue that should bind together ... efforts at local, national, regional and international levels."

Advances have been made in health and education, said Eliasson, noting that a smaller proportion of the world's population now lives in extreme poverty than 15 years ago.

"Yet, more than a billion people still live in extreme poverty, " he said. "Inequality tends to be systemic and is in many cases widening to an alarming degree. Economic opportunities for women and girls are lacking in far too many places. Environmental degradation and climate change threaten the basis of healthy lives and even our survival."

"We certainly do not live in peace and harmony with Nature. We are endangering the lives of future generations."

Unemployment remains high, the deputy secretary-general said. Globally, he said, as many as 73 million young people are looking for jobs, three times more likely than adults to be unemployed.

"When young people sense frustration and anger at a glaring lack of opportunity, they are more likely to lose faith in government and in institutions," he said. "In many parts of the world, this leaves young people receptive and vulnerable to marginalisation and radicalization."

That is why a set of new sustainable development goals, " universal, people-centered and cross-cutting in nature" are needed, he said.

After the Third World Conference on Disaster Risk Reduction, which was held in Sendai, Japan, last March, three major international decision-making processes are ahead before the end of the year: the Third International Financing for Development Conference in July, in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia; a UN summit to adopt the post-2015 development agenda in September in New York; and the UN climate change conference in December in Paris.

"As was the case with the development conferences of the 1990s, the outcomes of these key meetings will affect global political, economic, social and environmental priorities and policies for many, many years to come," he said. "These processes must complement and support each other."

"Let us use the lessons of the past to ensure a better future for all. No one must be left behind on our common voyage," he added. Endite