United Nations: This Week in Development - 15 April 2013
This Week in Development: 15 April 2013
UN Arms Trade Treaty draft includes
provisions to help curb violence in LDCs
During his
comments at the final consultations for the Arms Trade
Treaty (ATT) this week, United Nations Secretary-General Ban
Ki-moon said "there are common standards for the global
trade in armchairs but not the global trade in arms.
His statement highlighted that unregulated arms and munitions trades lead to continued and unprecedented violence, particularly in the least developed countries. Read more...
After Chad outbreak,
reasons for yellow fever activity remain elusive
In
late February, the government of Chad launched a mass
emergency vaccination campaign in response to an outbreak of
yellow fever. For the first time in decades, multiple cases
had been confirmed in the country. "It's not the first case,
but it's the first cluster," says Olivier Ronveaux, the
World Health Organization (WHO) Regional Yellow Fever
Officer for Africa. Read more...
Despite tragic
setbacks, push to end polio remains strong
In
September 2012, the end of polio seemed close at hand.
Incidence had fallen more than 99 percent since 1988, saving
8 million people from paralysis, thanks to an international
partnership known as the Global Polio Eradication Initiative
(GPEI). A polio-free world was almost in sight; only three
countries-Afghanistan, Nigeria, and Pakistan-remained
endemic. Read more...
57th CSW calls to end
child marriage in the developing world
According to a
report from the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) by
the year 2020, 142 million girls will be married before age
18. This translates to 14.2 million girls married each year
- 39,000 girls married each day. The governments of
Bangladesh, Canada, and Malawi sponsored a special session
of the 57th Commission on the Status of Women at United
Nations headquarters in New York City on Thursday to address
child marriage. "We all have a role to play in reducing
child marriage and ensuring that girls remain girls and not
wives and mothers," said moderator Carole Presern, executive
director of The Partnership for Maternal, Newborn & Child
Health. Read more...
The water crisis: a
women's crisis
At a United Nations conference on
water and women held Thursday, February 21 in New York City,
Margaret Batty, Policy and Campaigns Director at WaterAid,
declared water a "basic human need" and "fundamental human
right." Lakshmi Puri, Deputy Executive Director at UN Women,
r asserted that the time women spend collecting water
"excludes" them from fulfilling their rights and keeps them
from becoming tomorrow's leaders. Read more...
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