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Major Achievements of the United Nations
[The
Nobel Peace Prize]
The United Nations was established in the aftermath of a devastating war
to help stabilize international relations and give peace a more secure foundation.
Amid the threat of nuclear war and seemingly endless regional conflicts,
peace-keeping has become an overriding concern of the United Nations.
In the process, the activities of blue-helmeted peace-keepers have emerged
as the most visible role associated with the world organization.
The United Nations, however, is much more than a peace-keeper and forum
for conflict resolution. Often without attracting attention, the United
Nations and its family of agencies are engaged in a vast array of work
that touches every aspect of people's lives around the world.
Child survival and development. Environmental protection. Human rights.
Health and medical research. Alleviation of poverty and economic development.
Agricultural development and fisheries. Education. Family planning. Emergency
and disaster relief. Air and sea travel. Peaceful uses of atomic energy.
Labour and workers' rights. The list goes on. Here, in brief, is a sampling
of what the United Nations organizations have accomplished since 1945
when the world organization was founded.
- Maintaining peace and security - By having deployed a total
of 54 peace-keeping forces and observer missions as of September 2001,
the United Nations has been able to restore calm to allow the negotiating
process to go forward while saving millions of people from becoming
casualties of conflicts. There are presently 15 active peace-keeping
forces in operation.
- Making peace - Since 1945, the United Nations has been credited
with negotiating many peaceful settlements that have ended regional
conflicts. Recent cases include an end to the Iran-Iraq war, the withdrawal
of Soviet troops from Afghanistan, and an end to the civil war in
El Salvador. The United Nations has used quiet diplomacy to avert
imminent wars.
- Promoting democracy - The United Nations has enabled people
in many countries to participate in free and fair elections, including
those held in Cambodia, Namibia, El Salvador, Eritrea, Mozambique, Nicaragua,
South Africa, Kosovo and East Timor. It has provided electoral advice,
assistance, and monitoring of results.
- Promoting development - The UN system has devoted more attention
and resources to the promotion of the development of human skills and
potentials than any other external assistance effort. The system's annual
disbursements, including loans and grants, amount to more than $10 billion.
The UN Development Programme (UNDP), in close cooperation with over
170 Member States and other UN agencies, designs and implements projects
for agriculture, industry, education, and the environment. It supports
more than 5,000 projects with a budget of $1.3 billion. It is the largest
multilateral source of grant development assistance. The World Bank,
at the forefront in mobilizing support for developing countries worldwide,
has alone loaned $333 billion for development projects since 1946. In
addition, UNICEF spends more than $800 million a year, primarily on
immunization, health care, nutrition and basic education in 138 countries.
- Promoting human rights - Since adopting the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights in 1948, the United Nations has helped enact dozens
of comprehensive agreements on political, civil, economic, social and
cultural rights. By investigating individual complaints of human rights
abuses, the UN Human Rights Commission has focused world attention on
cases of torture, disappearance, and arbitrary detention and has generated
international pressure to be brought on governments to improve their
human rights records.
- Protecting the environment - The United Nations has played
a vital role in fashioning a global programme designed to protect the
environment. The "Earth Summit," the UN Conference on Environment and
Development held in Rio de Janeiro in 1992, resulted in treaties on
biodiversity and climate change, and all countries adopted "Agenda 21"
- a blueprint to promote sustainable development or the concept of economic
growth while protecting natural resources.
- Preventing nuclear proliferation - The United Nations, through
the International Atomic Energy Agency, has helped minimize the threat
of a nuclear war by inspecting nuclear reactors in 90 countries to ensure
that nuclear materials are not diverted for military purposes.
- Promoting self determination and independence - The United
Nations has played a role in bringing about independence in countries
that are now among its Member States.
- Strengthening international law - Over 300 international treaties,
on topics as varied as human rights conventions to agreements on the
use of outer space and seabed, have been enacted through the efforts
of the United Nations.
- Handing down judicial settlements of major international disputes
- By giving judgments and advisory opinions, the International Court
of Justice has helped settle international disputes involving territorial
issues, non-interference in the internal affairs of States, diplomatic
relations, hostage-taking, the right of asylum, rights of passage and
economic rights.
- Ending apartheid in South Africa - By imposing measures ranging
from an arms embargo to a convention against segregated sporting events,
the United Nations was a major factor in bringing about the downfall
of the apartheid system, which the General Assembly called "a crime
against humanity." Elections were held in April 1994 in which all South
Africans were allowed to participate on an equal basis, followed by
the establishment of a majority government.
- Providing humanitarian aid to victims of conflict - More than
30 million refugees fleeing war, famine or persecution have received
aid from the UN High Commissioner for Refugees since 1951 in a continuing
effort coordinated by the United Nations that often involves other agencies.
There are more than 19 million refugees, mostly women and children,
who are receiving food, shelter, medical aid, education and repatriation
assistance.
- Aiding Palestinian refugees - Since 1950, the United Nations
Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) has sustained four generations of Palestinians
with free schooling, essential health care, relief assistance and key
social services virtually without interruption. There are 2.9 million
refugees in the Middle East served by UNRWA.
- Alleviating chronic hunger and rural poverty in developing countries
- The International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) has developed
a system of providing credit, often in very small amounts, for the poorest
and most marginalised groups that has benefited over 230 million people
in nearly 100 developing countries.
- Focusing on African development - For the United Nations, Africa
continues to be the highest priority. In 1986, the United Nations convened
a special session to drum up international support for African economic
recovery and development. The United Nations also has instituted a system-wide
task force to ensure that commitments made by the international community
are honoured and challenges met. The Africa Project Development Facility
has helped entrepreneurs in 25 countries to find financing for new enterprises.
The Facility has completed 130 projects which represent investments
of $233 million and the creation of 13,000 new jobs. It is expected
that these new enterprises will either earn or save some $131 million
in foreign exchange annually.
- Promoting women's rights - A long term objective of the United
Nations has been to improve the lives of women and to empower women
to have greater control over their lives. Several conferences during
the UN-sponsored International Women's Decade set an agenda for the
advancement of women and women's rights for the rest of the century.
The UN Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM) and the International Research
and Training Institute for the Advancement of Women (INSTRAW) have supported
programmes and projects to improve the quality of life for women in
over 100 countries. They include credit and training, access to new
food-production technologies and marketing opportunities, and other
means of promoting women's work.
- Providing safe drinking water - UN agencies have worked to
make safe drinking water available to 1.3 billion people in rural areas
during the last decade.
- Eradicating smallpox - A 13-year effort by the World Health
Organization resulted in the complete eradication of smallpox from the
planet in 1980. The eradication has saved an estimated $1 billion a
year in vaccination and monitoring, almost three times the cost of eliminating
the scourge itself. WHO also helped wipe out polio from the Western
hemisphere, with global eradication expected by the year 2000.
- Pressing for universal immunization - Polio, tetanus, measles,
whooping cough, diphtheria and tuberculosis still kill more than eight
million children each year. In 1974, only 5 per cent of children in
developing countries were immunized against these diseases. Today, as
a result of the efforts of UNICEF and WHO, there is an 80 per cent immunization
rate, saving the lives of more than 3 million children each year.
- Reducing child mortality rates - Through oral rehydration therapy,
water and sanitation and other health and nutrition measures undertaken
by UN agencies, child mortality rates in the developing countries have
been halved since 1960, increasing the life expectancy from 37 to 67
years.
- Fighting parasitic diseases - Efforts by UN agencies in North
Africa to eliminate the dreaded screw worm, a parasite that feeds on
human and animal flesh, prevented the spread of the parasite, which
is carried by flies, to Egypt, Tunisia, sub-Saharan Africa and Europe.
A WHO programme also has saved the lives of 7 million children from
going blind from the river blindness and rescued many others from guinea
worm and other tropical diseases.
- Promoting investment in developing countries - The United Nations,
through the efforts of the UN Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO),
has served as a "match-maker" for North-South, South-South and East-West
investment, promoting entrepreneurship and self-reliance, industrial
cooperation and technology transfer and cost-effective, ecologically-sensitive
industry.
- Orienting economic policy toward social need - Many UN agencies
have emphasized the need to take account of human needs in determining
economic adjustment and restructuring policies and programmes, including
measures to safeguard the poor, especially in areas of health and education,
and "debt swaps for children."
- Reducing the effects of natural disasters - The World Meteorological
Organization (WMO) has spared millions of people from the calamitous
effects of both natural and man-made disasters. Its early warning system,
which utilizes thousands of surface monitors as well as satellites,
has provided information for the dispersal of oil spills and has predicted
long-term droughts. The system has allowed for the efficient distribution
of food aid to drought regions, such as southern Africa in 1992.
- Providing food to victims of emergencies - Nearly 815 million
people are currently suffering from chronic malnutrition, including
300 million children. In 2001, the World Food Programme (WFP) distributed
4.2 million tons of food to 77 million people in 82 countries for a
total operational expenditure of $ 1.74 billion. 20 million people received,
through development projects, aid in food-for-work projects to promote
agriculture, improve the environment, and in school feeding, health,
and nutrition projects, and 57 million people were offered assistance
through short- and long-term operations.These beneficiaries include
internally displaced people, refugees, and victims of natural disasters
such as floods and drought.
- Clearing land mines - The United Nations is leading an international
effort to clear land mines from former battlefields in Afghanistan,
Angola, Cambodia, El Salvador, Mozambique, Rwanda and Somalia that still
kill and maim thousands of innocent people every year.
- Protecting the ozone layer - The UN Environment Programme (UNEP)
and the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) have been instrumental
in highlighting the damage caused to the earth's ozone layer. As a result
of a treaty, known as the Montreal Protocol, there has been a global
effort to reduce chemical emissions of substances that have caused the
depletion of the ozone layer. The effort will spare millions of people
from the increased risk of contracting cancer due to additional exposure
to ultraviolet radiation.
- Curbing global warming - Through the Global Environment Facility,
countries have contributed substantial resources to curb conditions
that cause global warming. Increasing emissions from burning fossil
fuels and changes in land use patterns have led to a build-up of gases
in the atmosphere, which experts believe can lead to a warming of the
Earth's temperature.
- Preventing over-fishing - The Food and Agriculture Organization
(FAO) monitors marine fishery production and issues alerts to prevent
damage due to over-fishing.
- Limiting deforestation and promoting sustainable forestry development
- FAO, UNDP and the World Bank, through a Tropical Forests Action Programme,
have formulated and carried out forestry action plans in 90 countries.
- Cleaning up pollution - UNEP led a major effort to clean up
the Mediterranean Sea. It encouraged adversaries such as Syria and Israel,
Turkey and Greece to work together to clean up beaches. As a result,
more than 50 per cent of the previously polluted beaches are now usable.
- Protecting consumers' health - To ensure the safety of food
sold in the market place, UN agencies have established standards for
over 200 food commodities and safety limits for more than 3,000 food
containers.
- Reducing fertility rates - The UN Population Fund (UNFPA),
through its family planning programmes, has enabled people to make informed
choices, and consequently given families, and especially women, greater
control over their lives. As a result, women in developing countries
are having fewer children - from six births per woman in the 1960s to
3.5 today. In the 1960s, only 10 per cent of the world's families were
using effective methods of family planning. The number now stands at
55 per cent.
- Fighting drug abuse - The UN International Drug Control Programme
(UNDCP) has worked to reduce demand for illicit drugs, suppress drug
trafficking, and has helped farmers to reduce their economic reliance
on growing narcotic crops by shifting farm production toward other dependable
sources of income.
- Improving global trade relations - The UN Conference on Trade
and Development (UNCTAD) has worked to obtain special trade preferences
for developing countries to export their products to developed countries.
It has also negotiated international commodities agreements to ensure
fair prices for developing countries. And through the General Agreement
on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), which has now been supplanted by the World
Trade Organization (WTO), the United Nations has supported trade liberalization,
that will increase economic development opportunities in developing
countries.
- Promoting economic reform - Together with the World Bank and
the International Monetary Fund, the United Nations has helped many
countries improve their economic management, offered training for government
finance officials, and provided financial assistance to countries experiencing
temporary balance of payment difficulties.
- Promoting worker rights - The International Labour Organization
(ILO) has worked to guarantee freedom of the right to association, the
right to organize, collective bargaining, the rights of indigenous and
tribal peoples, promote employment and equal remuneration and has sought
to eliminate discrimination and child labour. And by setting safety
standards, ILO has helped reduce the toll of work-related accidents.
- Introducing improved agricultural techniques and reducing costs
- With assistance from the Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO)
that has resulted in improved crop yields, Asian rice farmers have saved
$12 million on pesticides and governments over $150 million a year in
pesticide subsidies.
- Promoting stability and order in the world's oceans - Through
three international conferences, the third lasting more than nine years,
the United Nations has spearheaded an international effort to promote
a comprehensive global agreement for the protection, preservation and
peaceful development of the oceans. The UN Convention on the Law of
the Sea, which came into force in 1994, lays down rules for the determination
of national maritime jurisdiction, navigation on the high seas, rights
and duties of coastal and other states, obligation to protect and preserve
the marine environment, cooperation in the conduct of marine scientific
research and preservation of living resources.
- Improving air and sea travel - UN agencies have been responsible
for setting safety standards for sea and air travel. The efforts of
the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) have contributed
to making air travel the safest mode of transportation. To wit: In 1947,
when nine million travelled, 590 were killed in aircraft accidents;
in 1993 the number of deaths was 936 out of the 1.2 billion airline
passengers. Over the last two decades, pollution from tankers has been
reduced by as much as 60 per cent thanks to the work of the International
Maritime Organization (IMO).
- Protecting intellectual property - The World Intellectual Property
Organization (WIPO) provides protection for new inventions and maintains
a register of nearly 3 million national trademarks. Through treaties,
it also protects the works of artists, composers and authors world-wide.
WIPO's work makes it easier and less costly for individuals and enterprises
to enforce their property rights. It also broadens the opportunity to
distribute new ideas and products without relinquishing control over
the property rights.
- Promoting the free flow of information - To allow all people
to obtain information that is free of censorship and culturally unbiased,
UNESCO has provided aid to develop and strengthen communication systems,
established news agencies and supported an independent press.
- Improving global communications - The Universal Postal Union
(UPU) has maintained and regulated international mail delivery. The
International Telecommunications Union (ITU) has coordinated use of
the radio spectrum, promoted cooperation in assigning positions for
stationary satellites, and established international standards for communications,
thereby ensuring the unfeterred flow of information around the globe.
- Empowering the voiceless - UN-sponsored international years
and conferences have caused governments to recognize the needs and contributions
of groups usually excluded from decision-making, such as the aging,
children, youth, homeless, indigenous and disabled people.
- Establishing "children as a zone of peace" - From El Salvador
to Lebanon, Sudan to former Yugoslavia, UNICEF pioneered the establishment
of "Days of Tranquillity" and the opening of "Corridors of Peace" to
provide vaccines and other assistance desperately needed by children
caught in armed conflict.
- Generating worldwide commitment in support of the needs of children
- Through UNICEF's efforts, the Convention on the Rights of the Child
entered into force as international law in 1990 and has become law in
166 countries by the end of September 1994; following the 1990 World
Summit for Children convened by UNICEF, more than 150 governments have
committed to reaching over 20 specific measurable goals to radically
improve children's lives by the year 2000.
- Improving education in developing countries - As a direct result
of the efforts of UN agencies, over 60 per cent of adults in developing
countries can now read and write, and 90 per cent of children in these
countries attend school.
- Improving literacy for women - Programmes aimed at promoting
education and advancement for women helped raise steadily the female
literacy rate in developing countries from 36 per cent in 1970 to 56
per cent in 1990 and to 72 per cent in 2000.
- Safeguarding and preserving historic cultural and architectural
sites - Ancient monuments in 81 countries including Greece, Egypt,
Italy, Indonesia and Cambodia, have been protected through the efforts
of UNESCO, and international conventions have been adopted to preserve
cultural property.
- Facilitating academic and cultural exchanges - The United Nations,
through UNESCO and the United Nations University (UNU), have encouraged
scholarly and scientific cooperation, networking of institutions and
promotion of cultural expressions, including those of minorities and
indigenous people.
Updated August 2002
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