By The Citizen Correspondent
In Summary
- More than 600 MPs from 113 countries among them Speakers, Presidents, and leader of delegation from Parliament and National Assemblies across the world are among the participants
Hanoi. Parliamentarians from
across the world are calling upon all Parliaments and MPs to use their
individual and collective power to make sustainable development a key
for developments among IPU members states and have a concrete ways on
which parliaments can implement the new sustainable development goals
(SDGs) when they are adopted later this year.
The call was made by Parliamentarians who are
attending the 132nd Inter- Parliamentary Union (IPU) Assembly in Hanoi,
Viet Nam which kicks off on 28 March and expected to end on 1st April,
2015 with the adoption of a declaration on the implementation of the new
sustainable development goals (SDGs).
More than 600 MPs from 113 countries among them
Speakers, Presidents, and leader of delegation from Parliament and
National Assemblies across the world are among the participants.
The members to the Inter- Parliamentary Union
(IPU) -Tanzania branch who are Mr Hamad Rashid Mohamed, Ms Suzan Lyimo,
Dr Pudensiana Kikwembe and Mr Faustine Ndgulile who is the IPU Advisory
Group Deputy Chair on HIV/AIDS and Maternal, Newborn and Child Health,
are representing Parliament of Tanzania.
The Assembly noted the enormous potential for change that MPs hold as legislators, representatives and overseers of government.
During the five-day gathering, IPU Members will
make commitments on parliamentary action to shape a new system of water
governance; on international law on national sovereignty and the
non-intervention in the internal affairs of State and human rights, and
on addressing the threat of cyber warfare to global peace and security.
With terrorism very much on the global agenda,
there have been two proposals made so far for an emergency debate and
resolution.
Australia and Morocco have respectively proposed
taking a stand on parliament’s role in combatting the threat of
terrorism by organizations such as Boko Haram and on ensuring enhanced
protection for humanity’s cultural heritage from terrorist groups in the
Middle East and North Africa on which delegates from Tanzania supports
the move.
The Hanoi Assembly also marks the 30th
anniversary of the Meeting of Women Parliamentarians, which for most of
its history has been a unique global gathering providing a valuable
space for women MPs as well as a mechanism to provide input into the
formal outcomes of the IPU Assembly.
The Meeting includes a discussion on what needs
to be done to fulfil the commitments made in the Beijing Platform for
Action on gender equality and women’s empowerment 20 years ago.
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