ESTONIA
STATEMENT BY
H. E. MR. MART LAAR
PRIME MINISTER
OF THE REPUBLIC OF ESTONIA
AT THE
MILLENNIUM SUMMIT
NEW YORK, 7 SEPTEMBER 2000
PERMANENT MISSION OF THE
REPUBLIC OF ESTONIA TO THE UNITED NATIONS
600 THIRD AVENUE 26TH FLOOR NEW
YORK NY 10016 TEL 212 883 0640 FAX 212 883 0648
ALSO AVAILABLE ON:
WWW.UN.ORG/MILLENNIUM
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Despite the fact that the United Nations has indeed
achieved a lot over the past 55 years, the UN has not always lived up to the
expectations the world had when it was first founded. This uneven record is
also described in the Secretary General's report. Please let me give an example
of the difference between high expectations and reality. In 1972 freedom
fighters in the then occupied Estonia wrote an appeal to the UN. They
considered the UN to be an unquestioned moral authority. In the real world they
ended up in the prison camps of the USSR without any notice from this high
body. The USSR happened to be a Big Power. The UN of the New Millennium must
make a difference.
To achieve this important goal, decision-making
and financial procedures of the UN have to be adapted and the organisation must
be streamlined. We do need a United Nations as an effective, accountable and
representative organisation that represents us all, large and small countries,
equally. But this has also another side: the member states themselves must be
willing to pitch in. It is not enough to demand that the UN does something, we
have to provide it with the necessary tools to do its work. That means that we
must lead by example.
Let
me focus on three points that we in Estonia consider as important:
1. Open government and open markets are a precondition for economic
recovery and growth.
2. The IT sector is a vital conduit to successful development
3. No country can allow itself a discount from security.
First. The Secretary General's report to us focused
on the eradication of poverty and on making the world a more equal place. This
is important. This can be done by alleviating debt and by providing more
development assistance. I think both of these aspects are vital. However, what
is crucial is that the member states of the United Nations commit themselves to
good governance and open markets. Without a commitment to these two elements no
amount of aid and no amount of debt relief will achieve this aim we all have to
strive for.
I am convinced that small countries, such as
Estonia, can provide an important example on how to manage economic restructuring.
We have been able to show that opening up our markets to outside competition,
cutting and indeed eliminating tariffs, privatising our economy and making the
government accountable to the people bring tangible benefits. The UNDP has
provided perhaps the best illustration of the efficiency of our approach. In
two years Estonia has moved 30 places up in the Human Development Index and we
belong today to the countries of a high human development.
Secondly
The Secretary General in his report to this Summit
highlighted the need to ensure that the benefits of the new technology,
especially information technology, become available to all. The high-level
panel on Information and Communication Technology called on all of the world's
population to have access to Internet by the end of 2004. This is an ambitious
goal and certainly not an easy task, but it is doable.
Internet may not be a cure for all ills, indeed we
have to be very careful not to overestimate the importance of Internet or to underestimate
its shortcomings. However, a prerequisite for the spread of Internet and of the
World Wide Web is total and unfettered access. Yet, the needs for action on
ensuring this opportunity is less and less of global scale - they are
also local ones, mostly it is within the hands of national governments. These,
who embrace the openness are able to escalate also their citizens opportunities
to the new qualitative horizons.
We have committed ourselves to promote information
technology through a nation-wide program guaranteeing each and every
schoolgirl and schoolboy with free access to the Internet. Today the Estonian
government carries out its sessions via computer and Estonia has risen to be
among the 20 most computerised nations in the world.
But this not enough. An equal distribution of money
and information alone does not guarantee welfare. We have to secure an
environment where it can be enjoyed. The next and decisive move for mankind is
to invest into ecological technologies that allow us to live in partnership
with nature.
We know how difficult it is to start such a program
with limited resources. But we also know what benefits can be gained from it.
That is why Estonia is committed to work together with the United Nations to
assist other UN member states to create new opportunities for themselves and
the world as a whole.
Thirdly
Just as we in Estonia have come to understand that
we must transmit some of the know-how we have gained to other UN members,
we have also reached the position that we cannot live on discounted security.
That is why the Estonian government decided this year to give up the 80%
discount that we have used so far and pay our contribution to peacekeeping in
full. It is important that if we expect of the United Nations to perform ever
more and more complicated tasks we must also be willing to foot the bill.
Naturally Estonia's contribution is not in itself much in dollar terms.
However, if every member of the UN will pay the dues that it is assessed in
full we will make a considerable step toward.
But paying our dues is not enough, of course. The
peacekeeping system of the United Nations has to be made more effective and
more adapted to the challenges of today as mentioned in the recent report on
peacekeeping. As we have all seen the term 'peacekeeping' itself is no longer
appropriate at a time when what is needed more than keeping the peace is
establishing a peaceful environment. Whether this task is delegated to other
organisations, such as NATO, or whether it is the United Nations itself
carrying out these tasks, we have to be able to face the new challenges of this
new millennium, also in the peacekeeping field. Estonia favours giving the
United Nations a stronger mandate to establish and preserve the peace.
I hope we all will consider it our main duty to help
the renewed UN to make a difference in the New Millennium.
Thank
you.