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      Millennium Goals Revisited:  
	Noble Ideas, and Feel-Good Moments  
	By Ramzy Baroud 
	Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, July 5, 2010  
	   When the United Nations Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) were 
	first declared, they were met with a sense of promise. A decade later, 
	despite all the official insistence that all is on track, it is increasingly 
	clear that this approach to development was flawed from the onset.    
	For ten years, numerous committees, international and local organizations 
	and independent researchers have tirelessly mulled over all sorts of 
	indicators, numbers, charts and statistical data relating to extreme poverty 
	and hunger, universal primary education, gender equality, child mortality, 
	and so on.    The conclusions derived from all the data weren’t 
	necessarily grim. And the sincerity of the many men and women who have 
	indefatigably worked to ensure that the eight international development 
	goals – agreed to by all 192 UN member states and over 20 international 
	organizations – were fully implemented, cannot in any way be discounted. 
	They were the ones who brought the issue to the fore, and they continue to 
	push forward with resolve and determination.    The problem lies with 
	the concept itself, and with the naive trust that governments and 
	politicians – whether rich or poor, democratic or authoritarian, leading 
	global wars or trying to steer clear from the abyss of famine - could 
	possibly share one common, selfless and unconditional love for humanity, 
	including the poor, the disadvantaged, hungry and the ill. The utopian 
	scenario might be attainable one day, but it certainly won’t be happening 
	anytime soon.    So why commit to such goals, with specific deadlines 
	and regular reports, if a genuine global consensus is not achievable?    
	Since its inception, the United Nations has been a source of two conflicting 
	agendas. One is undemocratic, and championed by those who wield the veto 
	power at the Security Council. The other is egalitarian, and it’s embodied 
	in the General Assembly. The latter reflects the global mood and 
	international opinion much more accurately than the former, which is largely 
	dictatorial and caters only to power.    As a result, two conflicting 
	sets of ideas and behaviors have emerged in the last six decades. One 
	imposes sanctions, leads wars and destroys nations, and the other offers a 
	helping hand, builds a school, shelters a refugee. The latter offers 
	assistance, albeit on a relatively small scale. The former spreads 
	devastation and destruction on a grand scale.    The Millennium goals 
	evolved from this very dilemma, which continues to afflict the United 
	Nations and undermine its noble principles. For now, MDGs would have to 
	settle for being a true reflection of peoples’ aspirations, but with little 
	expectation of achievable results.   That does not mean that there is 
	no good news. On the contrary, there will always be reasons to compel us to 
	push further towards desired change. Since September 8, 2000 – the day in 
	which the General Assembly adopted the Millennium Declaration - many 
	encouraging results have been reported. Although the progress, as reported 
	during the 2005 World Summit of leaders, was still falling short from the 
	target dates, much has been achieved.    On June 23, Charles Abugre, 
	the Director for Africa of the United Nations MDG campaign presented the 
	2010 Millennium Development Goals Report in Berlin. The same report was 
	simultaneously presented in New York and Paris. According to its findings, 
	the 2008 food and 2009 financial crises didn’t stop progress, but they 
	certainly made the goal of reducing global poverty by half “more difficult 
	to achieve.”    Indeed, significantly less people are reportedly 
	living on less income, though, according to Aburge, bringing “poverty down 
	to 15 percent of the global population” is less likely. Aburge has also said 
	that progress has been made throughout the world, with the distressing 
	exception of Central Asia, which is “riven by war and armed conflicts.”   
	In areas such as child mortality rate and combating epidemics, there has 
	been little or no progress. More, “environmental degradation continues at an 
	alarming pace,” according to Abugre. “CO2 emissions have even increased by 
	almost 50 percent over the past 17 years, and in spite of a minor slowdown 
	in emissions due to the crisis, are set to increase further.” It’s important 
	to mention here that some countries are much closer to succeeding with the 
	MDGs than others. China, for instance, has slashed the number of its poor by 
	a huge margin, while others have fallen deeper into poverty.   While 
	the numbers offer a strong enough reason to maintain a global push for 
	reducing poverty, there is little evidence to suggest that the improvement 
	is in any way related to the global pledge of 2000. It may well be a 
	reflection of the state of affairs of individual countries. For example, 
	China’s economic progress is hardly related to the September 2000 meet, and 
	Afghanistan never really opted for the US-NATO invasion of 2001, which 
	eliminated any realistic chance for the country to ever meet such seemingly 
	lofty standards.    In its constant search for consensus, the General 
	Assembly’s goals hardly view development from a critical perspective. They 
	do not take into account the way in which structural adjustment policies, 
	designed by international bodies such as the International Monetary Fund 
	(IMF) and the World Bank forced poor countries into debt and extreme poverty 
	in the first place. They also ignore the way in which rich and powerful 
	countries, in their quest for military, economic and political dominance 
	ensure the subordination of poor, politically fragile, and militarily weak 
	countries.     Of course, delving into the real issues would 
	undermine the futile search for consensus, threatening the ‘amiable’ image 
	of the General Assembly. These are left instead to the Security Council or 
	those members of the UNSC, whose ‘opinion’ is the only one that truly 
	counts, and who regularly go on to prescribe decisive and cruel policies. 
	  All of this is not to say that the millennium goals should be 
	relegated. Every noble effort should be supported and lauded. But 
	unwarranted optimism can border on folly if one intentionally ignores the 
	dynamic of lasting change, whether at a micro or macro levels. The 
	discussion of MDGs should not come at the expense of realism and truth, and 
	it should certainly not just serve as yet another feel-good moment for the 
	rich, while further humiliating for the poor. 
	******   - Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net) 
	is an internationally-syndicated columnist and the editor of 
	PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: 
	Gaza's Untold Story (Pluto Press, London), now available on Amazon.com. 
	 *****   Visit my website: 
	www.ramzybaroud.net.    Press TV: Former Mayor of London Ken 
	Livingstone hosts an exciting discussion on Ramzy Baroud's book: My Father 
	Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza's Untold Story with authors Dr. Ghada Karmi and 
	Ben White. Watch: Part 
	I, Part II,
	Part III.    
	Aljazeera: Also watch a short documentary about the book (published by Pluto 
	Press; Palgrave Macmillan, 2010). The subtitled program is available at 
	YouTube in two parts: 
	Part I &
	
	Part II.    Short Film: Then, check out this short promo (in
	English & Arabic) 
	about the book.    Order Your Copy Today: Through
	
	Amazon,
	
	Amazon UK, Barnes 
	& Nobles and
	Pluto 
	Press. 
	  
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