UNITED NATIONS
World
leaders on Friday pledged to end extreme poverty within 15 years,
adopting an ambitious set of UN goals to be backed up by trillions of
dollars in development spending.
Pope Francis welcomed
the new global agenda as an "important sign of hope" in his speech to
the UN General Assembly and urged leaders to deliver on their promise to
transform the world by 2030.
Making his first address
to the United Nations, the pontiff sounded a note of warning, saying
pledges were worthless without the determination to follow through.
"Solemn
commitments, however, are not enough, even though they are a necessary
step toward solutions," the pope said as he urged leaders to take
"concrete steps and immediate measures" to protect the environment and
end exclusion.
Billed as the most comprehensive
anti-poverty plan ever, the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and
169 targets were adopted at the start of a summit that capped three
years of tough negotiations.
They will replace the
Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) that expire this year and will apply
to both developing and developed countries.
The new UN
agenda aims to end poverty, ensure healthy lives, promote education and
combat climate change, at a cost of between $3.5 and $5 trillion per
year until 2030.
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon
described the plan as a "to-do list for people and planet" that laid out
a "universal, integrated and transformative vision for a better world."
"The true test of commitment to agenda 2030 will be implementation," Ban told leaders.
"We need action from everyone, everywhere."
Teenage
Nobel laureate Malala Yousafzai urged leaders to zero in on promoting
education, which she described as "the real investment the world needs
and what world leaders must do."
Taking time away from
Europe's refugee crisis, German Chancellor Angela Merkel applauded the
new goals but stressed that peace was a "key prerequisite" for
development.
Millions of refugees and migrants are
fleeing "raw terror and violence", Merkel said, before adding, "We must
tackle the causes of flight."
Immediately after their
three-day summit, world leaders open a General Assembly debate on
Monday, with the war in Syria and Europe's migration crisis set to take
centre stage.
KEEPING PROMISES
Much
attention has focused on ending extreme poverty for an estimated 836
million people still struggling on the margins of survival, mostly in
sub-Saharan Africa and Asia.
Billions of dollars in
development aid will be redirected to meet the targets, but the United
Nations also wants to tap into local sources of financing through
improved revenue collection.
In his first UN address,
Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari vowed to "plug all loopholes"
allowing corrupt capital flight and to "prevent oil theft" that is
undermining Africa's largest economy.
The global goals
call for improved transparency in oil-producing countries to clamp down
on corruption and ensure that revenues from natural resources are used
to improve the lives of citizens.
Indian Prime Minister
Narendra Modi, whose government has yet to announce its action plan for
climate change, declared that helping his country's poor will have
"great consequences for the sustainable development of our beautiful
planet."
It is unlikely that all countries will achieve
all of the goals, but aid groups say they will provide benchmarks for
governments in every area of development.
Jamie
Drummond, executive director for global strategy at the ONE Campaign,
described the global goals as a "citizen's scorecard, to hold
governments accountable for delivery."
"The key missing ingredient is political will," said Drummond.
"We have a great history of promise-making at the UN, but the question is whether the promise is ever kept."
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