UN Summit Recap


Oct 17th, 2008 1:09 PM EST
By Jamie Drummond

I thought I should share some inside skinny on the week we spent in New York September 22-26 at the UN’s special summit on the Millennium Development Goals. We went there to try to attract some attention to – indeed celebrate – the efforts against extreme poverty in recent years, and to call for an acceleration of that progress.

Bono was frantically blogging for the Financial Times in every spare second throughout the week on his way to and from meetings with various leaders. The meetings were many: with Spanish President Zapatero to plan for their E.U. presidency in 2010; with President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf of Liberia to discuss their remaining private commercial debt (think that’s sorted now); with UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown to push on the overall Millennium Goals project; and with President Sarkozy of France and President Barroso of the EU to push Europe on delivering an extra billion euros from the EU budget to fight hunger and invest in agricultural productivity in Africa. Bob Geldof arrived a few days into the melee and participated on the opening panel of the Clinton Global Initiative, popped up on CNN, and met with Mayor Bloomberg, Bill Gates and others along the way.

One highlight was unveiling our “Celebrate Accelerate” video to a crowd of activists and leaders (including Bill Gates, Bob Geldof, Jeff Sachs) honoring the “quietest storm in town”: the UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon. Another, was dropping in on the “In My Name” launch where we regrouped with will.i.am and other activist allies.

Roxy UN DeliveryAn important part of the week was passing over ONE members’ hunger petition, with 50,000 signers, to Bob Orr, the Assistant Secretary General. The petition targets Ban Ki-moon, and all the G8 leaders, asking them to finance the current $1 billion gap in worldwide agricultural financing.

In addition to all of this, Kim Smith and a team of staff and volunteers brought the ONE Bus to town and, thanks to Mayor Bloomberg, parked it in some highly visible locations in the city.

By September 26th, it was clear it had been a decent week. In total there were $16 billion worth of commitments, some old, and some new, focused largely on building upon success to get more kids in school; eliminating malaria deaths by 2015 (yes, that’s got chutzpah – but by acting together it can be done); and renewing efforts against maternal mortality and hunger.

By investing in the fight against extreme poverty we can create new and stable markets where currently there are none; build strong global growth engines that can keep the global economy going when some of us falter; ensure strong health systems; and ensure that other’s instability doesn’t become ours. Above all – because it’s morally the right thing to do.

So now this piece of the campaign goes on to upcoming votes in Brussels on agriculture funding, and a key meeting about financing for development that is happening in Doha, Qatar, in the Middle East, at the end of November. We’ll keep you updated on both.

-Jamie Drummond

TAGS: Ban Ki Moon, Bill Gates, Clinton Global Initiative, Development Assistance, Food Aid, Liberia, Mayor Michael Bloomberg, Millennium Development Goals, New York, ONE Bus Tour, Policy News, President Barroso, President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, Prime Minister Gordon Brown, UN Summit September 2008, United Nations, World Food Crisis, Zapatero

 

  1. Debbie Ksays: Oct 17th, 2008 9:06 PM EST

    October 17, 2008 at 9:06 pm

    Thank you for your first-hand synopsis of the UN Summit on the MDG’s – it is very much appreciated.

    I was especially impressed by this section of your post:

    By investing in the fight against extreme poverty we can create new and stable markets where currently there are none; build strong global growth engines that can keep the global economy going when some of us falter; ensure strong health systems; and ensure that other’s instability doesn’t become ours. Above all – because it’s morally the right thing to do.

    We are very fortunate to have your expertise and your passion for a better world within our midst, Jaime Drummond. Thank you for all that you have been a part of for Africa’s Future.

    AS ONE, debbie :)

  2. Debbie Ksays: Oct 18th, 2008 7:38 AM EST

    October 18, 2008 at 7:38 am

    PS:
    Africa is able to look forward toward a brighter future due to your efforts and those of DATA’s which have become firmly enmeshed within ONE’s framework.

    Millions of African people alive today, able to care for their children and help stabilize their countries’ social structures are something to be rightly proud of – before this world and before God.

    Much continued happiness and success, Jaime Drummond.

    ALWAYS FOREVER, ONE – debbie :)

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