Dozens of non-government groups met in Phnom Penh this week to have
their say in the U.N.’s plans for a new set of global development goals
for the next 15 years. They will replace the U.N.’s current Millennium
Development Goals (MDGs), which are set to expire in 2015.
–News Analysis
Established in 2000, the first set of eight MDGs gave countries
specific targets to meet on poverty, health, education and the
environment. NGOs in Cambodia hope that the second set will highlight
human rights, equality and jobs.
As officials at the U.N. in New York this week started designing the
new goals that will likely focus on narrowing income gaps, improving
social protections and holding countries more accountable for the
development targets they sign up to, nongovernmental organizations here
were also asking themselves and local communities what they want the new
goals to achieve.
They met on Wednesday and Thursday in Phnom Penh to pool feedback
from earlier discussions on the topic, which they hope will help shape
both the U.N.’s new goals and the Cambodian government’s next National
Strategic Development Plan.
The Cooperation Committee for Cambodia (CCC), an umbrella NGO leading
the effort, organized meetings in Battambang and Kompong Cham provinces
in March to get input from local communities, informal associations and
the NGOs helping them.
The most common request, said Soeung Saroeun, the CCC’s executive
director, was that human rights and a free and fair judicial system, for
example, be made central to any new set of development goals the U.N.
would seek to adopt.
“The most important thing is… rights based development. Everything
must put human rights at the center,” Mr. Saroeun said on the sidelines
of the meeting in Phnom Penh. “The second is social inclusion and
equality, because we see that with economic land concessions, the
distribution [of land] is not fair. People with power and money, they
can get more.”
Mr. Saroeun said the other two main concerns raised at the meetings
were that the U.N.’s new development goals also focus more on
environmentally sustainable development and creating more and better
jobs.
In its most recent assessment of Cambodia’s progress on the current
eight development goals, from mid-2012, the Ministry of Planning said
the country had already met two goals—reducing infant and maternal
mortality—and was most likely to meet at least two more—on reducing
poverty and raising primary school enrollment rates.
The ministry said meeting the 2015 targets for the other four goals,
which relate to gender equality, disease infection rates, environmental
sustainability and partnering with other governments, would prove harder
or unlikely. It said a ninth goal Cambodia added on its own, to
eliminate landmine deaths and clear the most mine-contaminated land, was
also unlikely to be reached.
The country’s original target for reduced maternal mortality by 2015
was 140 deaths per 100,000 live births. But with that figure unlikely to
be met, the government later changed the target to 250 deaths per
100,000 live births. As of 2011, the number of deaths stood at 206,
meaning the revised target had already been met.
By lowering the bar, Cambodia achieved its 2015 development target.
The government also changed the way it calculates the poverty line in
2011, a complex formula based in part on how much it costs to consume a
given amount of calories.
In a report on the country’s poverty line released in April, the
Planning Ministry said the new formula was “more realistic.” Cambodia
is now expected to just barely meet its target goal of having only 19.5
percent of the population living in poverty by 2015.
“Now the poverty rate is 20 percent, so the forecast for 2015 is that
the poverty rate will drop to maybe 17 or 18 percent,” said Theng
Pagnathun, the Planning Ministry’s director-general of planning.
Marc Derveeuw, country representative for the U.N. Population Fund,
praised Cambodia on its progress, and said that revising development
goals downward was not unique to Cambodia, and defended the changes.
“Opportunities were given to many countries to set new targets that were more realistic and achievable,” he said.
“Cambodians are less poor, they are healthier. Cambodians are better
educated…. It’s [better] to be Cambodian than 15 years ago,” he said.
But Cambodia has only met some of its 2015 targets if it lowers the bar.
The CCC’s Mr. Saroeun said the current development goals, original or
revised, still focus too much on economic targets at the expense of
social ones, like human rights.
“The new MDGs should focus on both, how social development and
economic development can work together,” he said. “We appreciate what
they [the current goals] have done…but there is a gap.”
He said the CCC will turn the feedback it received this week and in
March into a report and submit it to the U.N. and the government next
month.
Source : cambodiadaily.com
Monday, May 27, 2013
NGOs Want New UN Goals to Focus on Rights
May 27, 2013