 |
| Amb. Koonjul and USG Chowdhury
sign agreement |
1 December 2004 –
The United
Nations and the Government of Mauritius have signed an agreement officially
paving the way for a conference on the plight of small island developing
States next month in the Indian Ocean country.
The accord was endorsed
Tuesday in New York by Ambassador Jagdish D. Koonjul and the Secretary-General
of the Mauritius International Meeting, UN Under-Secretary-General Anwarul
K. Chowdhury.
The Conference, slated
to be held from 10 to 14 January, is viewed as critical to the future
of the world's small islands nations, which face a host of problems ranging
from climate change to economic isolation.
More than 2,000 participants
from the islands, their traditional donor partners and other countries,
including over two dozen national leaders, are expected to take part in
the UN International Meeting to Review the Implementation of the Programme
of Action for the Sustainable Development of Small Island Developing States.
That action plan was adopted a decade ago at a Global Conference in Barbados.
The Mauritius gathering
had originally been scheduled to open in August, but delays in the construction
of the conference centre forced a postponement.
The vulnerability
of small island nations was spotlighted this year when hurricanes and
major storms devastated Haiti, Grenada and other Caribbean countries,
as well as island States in the Pacific and Indian Oceans.
"The Mauritius conference
provides a critical window of opportunity for the future of small islands,"
said Mr. Chowdhury.
He warned that, "If
this occasion to extend the international community's support to small
island developing States in their development efforts is not successful,
it might take decades before such an opportunity arises again."
In a recent report,
UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan called attention to the specific challenges
of small island developing States, including their remoteness, susceptibility
to natural disasters and climate change, fragility of land and marine
ecosystems, high transportation costs, limited diversification in production
and exports, dependence on international markets, and vulnerability to
external economic shocks.
"As a result, their
economies, including trade, financial flows and agricultural production,
show greater volatility than those of other countries," said Mr. Annan.