Image source: UN SDGs.org |
Leaders from nearly 200
nations were poised on Friday to adopt a sweeping plank of global goals to combat
poverty, inequality and climate change in the broadest and most comprehensive
effort ever by the United Nations to tackle the world's ills. Adoption of the 17
Sustainable Development Goals, or SDGs, caps three years of brainstorming and
negotiations with input from nearly every corner of the world, organizers say,
and provides a roadmap for countries to finance and create change.
The
15-year objectives aim to end poverty, combat inequality, protect human rights,
promote gender equality, protect the planet and create conditions for
sustainable growth and shared peace and prosperity.
They
replace the previous U.N. action plan, the Millennium Development Goals, which
were adopted in 2000.
Thomson
Reuters Foundation report continues:
Supporters
say the SDGs go much further by addressing the root causes of such issues as
poverty and by looking at means as well as ends. They also are intended to be
universal rather than applied only to the developing world.
The
193 member nations are scheduled to adopt the SDGs on Friday following a
morning address by Pope Francis and a performance by Colombian singer Shakira
singing "Imagine."
The
adoption of the goals is far from a rubber-stamp event, said Amina Mohammed,
Assistant Secretary-General and Special Advisor on Post-2015 Development
Planning.
Rather,
she and other U.N. officials will be listening intently to world leaders
speaking during the three-day SDG summit which wraps up on Sunday.
Image source: UN SDGs.org |
"My
greatest worry is that we don't get clarity in terms of the commitments from
leaders to this agenda," she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
"The
problems are huge so the response has got to be huge."
Once
the summit ends, the task is getting the goals, along with their 169
accompanying targets, incorporated into programs, policies and parliaments in
member nations.
"Now
implementation is everything," said Helen Clark, administrator of the
United Nations Development Programme and former New Zealand prime minister.
"These
goals will or won't happen depending on whether governments decide to take them
seriously."
But
Clark added that she sees the goals as "a sign of hope for the
world".
Much
is riding on the SDGs and their future, Mohammed said.
"If
we miss this opportunity, it's not the end of the world but it's going to be a
far more miserable world, and nobody's going to be very happy with that,"
she said.
Implementation of the new
goals, requiring trillions of dollars in investment, will be monitored and
reviewed using a set of global indicators to be agreed by March 2016.
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