UNITED NATIONS - MILLENNIUM SUMMIT
New York, 10 September 2000
"Survival and spiritual development of man firm
support of the human rights charter". These are the
three key points of the statement by the Grand
Chancellor of the Order of Malta, Amb. Carlo Marullo
di Condojanni, to the Millennium Summit of Heads of
State and Government at the United Nations, opening
the 55th Session of the General Assembly in New York
from 6 to 8 September. Referring to these principles,
which for nine centuries have constituted and still
constitute the pillars of the Order's humanitarian
action worldwide, the Head of Government of the
Order, in line with the United Nations Secretary
General Kofi Annan's programmatic speech, stressed
the priorities that every Head of State and
Government must recognise. These do not only refer
to the future role of the world organization, but
also and in particular to making every effort and
using their powers to lessen differences and
omissions and counter the deepening of imbalances if
the globalisation of markets is not adequately
governed.
Amb. Carlo Marullo pointed out the need for a
harmonious and controlled development, respecting
the ecosystem and the new biotechnologies applied to
agriculture, guaranteeing the access of poorer
countries to means of production to improve their
quality of life, but more often and more extensively
for pure survival. On the same level of priority and
from an intellectual point of view, stressed the
Grand Chancellor, is the need to widen cultural
horizons with regards to the right to education for
man's spiritual development; and from a social point
of view, not to allow any discrimination and to
protect the right to life with the necessary
guarantees, also with respect to justice in its
widest meaning. Within this framework, Amb. Marullo
said, the Sovereign Military Order of Malta wants
firmly to confirm its total support of the Secretary
General's invitation to all nations "to sign and
ratify the Rome Statutes International Criminal
Court, so as to consolidate and enlarge the success
achieved in delivering to justice those guilty of
crimes against humanity".
Over 100 Heads of State and Government participated
in the World Summit. Besides giving official
speeches they also took part in four round tables
with interactive working groups addressing all the
key topics of the Summit. In preparation for the
Summit, the Secretary General issued the Millennium
Report on 3 April last entitled: "We the Peoples:
the Role of the United Nations in the Twenty-First
Century". This report, besides offering an action
plan for extending globalisation to all populations
in every continent, presents the United Nations'
mission during its 55 years of life; it lists
numerous special goals and programmatic initiatives
that the Secretary General is asking all world
leaders to consider. A special working group,
specially set up by Kofi Annan to discuss how to
strengthen peace maintenance operations, issued it
report on the eve of the World Summit to all
participants.
The Summit has also offered the further opportunity
to Heads of State and Government to sign
multilateral treaties, or lodge ratification
instruments for them, and in particular the 25 main
treaties representing the fundamental goals of the
United Nations.
During his time in New York, the Grand Chancellor,
staying with his wife Donna Elisabetta in the
Order's Diplomatic Mission to the United Nations,
has had profitable meetings with some government
delegations present at the Summit and with numerous
members of the Order's Diplomatic Corps.
UNDER THE BANNER OF HOPE THE MILLENNIUM SUMMIT THE
ORDER OF MALTA INVITES STATES TO RESPECT HUMAN
RIGHTS
The Millennium Summit, the largest meeting ever held
on a global level of Heads of State and Government,
is taking place in New York, in the headquarters of
the United Nations. It has been a harsh test for
security systems with over 45000 agents mobilized to
prevent any kind of accident.
Outside the UN Building groups of people of every
political creed have been gathering since the
morning of the 5th to protest against State systems
and other international issues, shouting slogans and
brandishing placards.
The event opened with the speech of the Secretary
General Kofi Annan, touching all the points linked
to the presence of the United Nations worldwide and,
not least, that of the signature of the Treaty of
Rome, instituting the International Criminal
Tribunal for crimes against humanity.
The speakers, starting with President Clinton,
demonstrated that although the cold war was a thing
of the past there were still much disagreement on
the political plane; even more difficult for the
United Nations is their support of the defence of
human rights. On this latter subject, the address of
the Order's Head of Government, Ambassador Count
Carlo Marullo di Condojanni to the General Assembly,
was particularly interesting.
Mr. President,
The Millennium Summit represents an opportunity to
consider the actual evolutionary prospects with
respect to the programmes presented by the
International Community concerning the many problems
faced by peoples in the world today, for most of
which an adequate solution has not been found.
The Sovereign Military Order of Malta congratulates
the Secretary General on the high moral content of
his speech, and wishes humbly to remind Heads of
State and Heads of Government convened here some
priorities, in the firm belief that when going home,
as the Secretary General said, they will make their
best efforts and use their powers in order to lessen
differences and omissions, especially at this stage
in the history of mankind in which the globalisation
of markets, unless adequately governed, may lead to
a deepening of the existing imbalances, thus making
richer the already rich countries, and poorer the
already poor ones.
Much will depend on the way in which the new
bio-technologies applied to agriculture will be
exploited. Such technologies must not become a new
mine to be exploited by the few rich and powerful
countries, but they must be made available to
mankind, respecting, in any case, the fundamental
rules of nature, thus without unhinging ecosystems
and addressing the same towards an harmonious and
controlled development assuring the poorer countries
an easier access to production systems. Therefore,
this may improve, if not solve, an age-long and
chronic problem which cannot be tolerated any longer
by all those who care for the future of mankind.
Therefore, if we look with great hope at the
projects aimed at the alleviation of hunger in the
world, at the enhancement of quality of life,
through at least sufficient food and medicine
supplies, we must not neglect, in addition to the
issues relating to survival, the spiritual
development of man from an intellectual point of
view, and therefore the right to education, from a
social point of view, and therefore the end of any
discrimination, from the point of view of the right
to live with the necessary assurances, also with
respect to justice in the largest meaning of this
word.
On the other hand, this is one of the purposes for
which the United Nations were established. Such
purposes specifically include the enhancement of
behaviours complying with the principles of justice.
In a world approaching the third millennium, also
the so-called civilised countries are unfortunately
late in providing people with an effective justice.
They openly declare a formal adherence to the
charter of human rights, but then trample on such
rights each time they do not assure fast trials and
allow the use of unlimited pre-trial detention in
criminal cases (thus breaching the basic legal right
of the presumption of innocence until the final
conviction) and, which is even worse, without
respecting the individual right to an effective
defence vis-à-vis the often excessive power granted
to the prosecution, thus breaching the primary rule
which should govern criminal trials, i.e. the
absolute equality of defence and prosecution before
an actually impartial judge.
In this view, the Sovereign Military Order of Malta
firmly confirms its fullest response to the
Secretary General’s invitation to all nations to
"sign and ratify the Rome Statutes of the
International Criminal Court, so as to consolidate
and enlarge the success achieved in delivering to
justice those guilty of crimes against humanity".
Much could be added on this subject, but this would
require additional time. The hope remains that the
Millennium Summit may, accepting the requests of the
Secretary General, effectively stimulate better
forms of international aggregations among the
States, in order to face emergencies in the world,
also in view of a legitimate universal control which
is now called for by the global perspective in which
the International Community has been moving for some
years.
Thank you Mr. President, and best wishes for the
work we are all facing.
UN SECRETARY GENERAL KOFI ANNAN'S MILLENIUM REPORT
SUMMARY
I. New Century, New Challenges
II. Globalization and Governance
III. Freedom from Want
IV. Freedom from Fear
V. Sustaining our future
VI. Renewing the United Nations
VII. For consideration by the Summit
I. New Century, New Challenges
The new millennium, and the Millennium Summit, offer
the world’s peoples a unique occasion to reflect on
their common destiny, at a moment when they find
themselves interconnected as never before. They look
to their leaders to identify and act on the
challenges ahead. The United Nations can help meet
those challenges, if its Members share a renewed
sense of mission. Founded to introduce new
principles into international relations in 1945, the
UN has succeeded better in some areas than others.
This is a chance to reshape the United Nations so
that it can make a real and measurable difference to
people’s lives in the new century.
II. Globalization and Governance
The benefits of globalization are obvious: faster
growth, higher living standards, new opportunities.
Yet a backlash has begun, because these benefits are
so unequally distributed, and because the global
market is not yet underpinned by rules based on
shared social objectives.
In 1945 the founders set up an open and co-operative
system for an international world. This system
worked, and made it possible for globalization to
emerge. As a result we now live in a global world.
Responding to this shift is a central challenge for
world leaders today.
In this new world, groups and individuals more and
more often interact directly across frontiers,
without involving the State. This has its dangers.
Crime, narcotics, terrorism, pollution, disease,
weapons, refugees and migrants: all move back and
forth faster and in greater numbers than in the
past. People feel threatened by events far away.
They are also more aware of injustice and brutality
in distant countries, and expect States to do
something about them. But new technologies also
create opportunities for mutual understanding and
common action. If we are to get the best out of
globalization and avoid the worst, we must learn to
govern better, and how to govern better together.
That does not mean world government or the eclipse
of nation states. On the contrary, States need to be
strengthened. And they can draw strength from each
other, by acting together within common institutions
based on shared rules and values. These institutions
must reflect the realities of the time, including
the distribution of power. And they must serve as an
arena for states to co-operate with non-state
actors, including global companies. In many cases
they need to be complemented by less formal policy
networks, which can respond more quickly to the
changing global agenda.
The gross disparities of wealth in today’s world,
the miserable conditions in which well over a
billion people live, the prevalence of endemic
conflict in some regions, and the rapid degradation
of the natural environment: all these combine to
make the present model of development unsustainable,
unless remedial measures are taken by common
agreement. A recent survey of public opinion across
six continents - the largest ever conducted -
confirms that such measures are what people want.
III. Freedom from Want
The past half-century has seen unprecedented
economic gains. But 1.2 billion people have to live
on less than $1 a day. The combination of extreme
poverty with extreme inequality between countries,
and often also within them, is an affront to our
common humanity. It also makes many other problems
worse, including conflict. And the world’s
population is still rising rapidly, with the
increase concentrated in the poorest countries.
We must act to reduce extreme poverty by half, in
every part of the world, before 2015. The following
are priority areas:
Achieving sustained growth. This means, above all,
ensuring that people in all developing countries can
benefit from globalization.
Generating opportunities for the young. By 2015, all
children must complete primary schooling, with equal
opportunities for both genders at all levels of
education. And ways must be found to provide young
people with decent work.
Promoting health and combating HIV/AIDS. Health
research must be redirected at the problems
affecting 90 per cent of the world’s people. By 2010
we should have cut the rate of HIV infection in
young people by 25 per cent.
Upgrading the slums. We must support the "Cities
without Slums" action plan, which aims to improve
the lives of 100 million slum dwellers by 2020.
Including Africa. The Report challenges experts and
philanthropic foundations to tackle low agricultural
productivity in Africa. It also urges African
governments to give higher priority to reducing
poverty, and the rest of the world to help them.
Building digital bridges. New technology offers an
unprecedented chance for developing countries to
"leapfrog" earlier stages of development. Everything
must be done to maximize their peoples’ access to
new information networks.
Demonstrating global solidarity. Rich countries must
further open their markets to poor countries’
products, must provide deeper and faster debt
relief, and must give more and better focused
development assistance. Ridding the world of the
scourge of extreme poverty is a challenge to every
one of us. We must not fail to meet it.
IV. Freedom from Fear
Wars between States have become less frequent. But
in the last decade internal wars have claimed more
than 5 million lives, and driven many times that
number of people from their homes. At the same time
weapons of mass destruction continue to cast their
shadow of fear. We now think of security less as
defending territory, more in terms of protecting
people. The threat of deadly conflict must be
tackled at every stage:
Prevention. Conflicts are most frequent in poor
countries, especially in those that are ill governed
and where there are sharp inequalities between
ethnic or religious groups. The best way to prevent
them is to promote healthy and balanced economic
development, combined with human rights, minority
rights and political arrangements in which all
groups are fairly represented. Also, illicit
transfers of weapons, money, or natural resources
must be forced into the limelight.
Protecting the vulnerable. We must find better ways
to enforce international and human rights law, and
ensure that gross violations do not go unpunished.
Addressing the dilemma of intervention. National
sovereignty must not be used as a shield for those
who wantonly violate the rights and lives of their
fellow human beings. In the face of mass murder,
armed intervention authorized by the Security
Council is an option that cannot be relinquished..
Strengthening peace operations. The Millennium
Assembly is invited to consider recommendations from
a high-level panel the Secretary-General has
established to review all aspects of peace
operations.
Targeting sanctions. Recent research has explored
ways to make sanctions "smarter", by targeting them
better. The Security Council should draw on this
research when designing and applying sanctions
regimes in future.
Pursuing arms reductions. The Secretary-General
urges Member States to control small arms transfers
more rigorously; and to re-commit themselves to
reducing the dangers both of existing nuclear
weapons and of further proliferation.
V. Sustaining our future
We now face an urgent need to secure the freedom of
future generations to sustain their lives on this
planet - and we are failing to do it. We have been
plundering our children’s heritage to pay for
unsustainable practices. Changing this is a
challenge for rich and poor countries alike. The Rio
Conference in 1992 provided the foundations, and the
Montreal Protocol on ozone-depleting substances is
an important step forward. But elsewhere our
responses are too few, too little and too late.
Before 2002 we must revive the debate and prepare to
act decisively in the following areas:
Coping with climate change. Reducing the threat of
global warming requires a 60 per cent reduction in
emissions of carbon and other "greenhouse gases".
This can be achieved by promoting energy efficiency
and relying more on renewable energy sources.
Implementing the 1997 Kyoto Protocol would be a
first step.
Confronting the water crisis. The report urges
endorsement of the World Water Forum Ministerial
Conference’s target of cutting by half the
proportion of people without access to safe and
affordable water before 2015. It also calls for a
"Blue Revolution" which would increase agricultural
productivity per unit of water, while improving
management of watersheds and flood plains.
Defending the soil. The best hope of feeding a
growing world population from shrinking agricultural
land may lie in biotechnology, but its safety and
environmental impact are hotly debated. The
Secretary-General is convening a global policy
network to try and resolve these controversies, so
that the poor and hungry do not lose out.
Preserving forests, fisheries, and biodiversity. In
all these areas, conservation is vital. Governments
and the private sector must work together to support
it.
Building a new ethic of stewardship. The
Secretary-General recommends four priorities:
1) Education of the public.
2) "Green accounting", to integrate the environment
into economic policy.
3) Regulations and incentives.
4) More accurate scientific data.
Peoples, as well as Governments, must commit
themselves to a new ethic of conservation and
stewardship.
VI. Renewing the United Nations
Without a strong UN, it will be much harder to meet
all these challenges.
Strengthening the UN depends on Governments, and
especially on their willingness to work with others
- the private sector, non-governmental organizations
and multilateral agencies - to find consensus
solutions. The UN must act as a catalyst, to
stimulate action by others. And it must fully
exploit the new technologies, especially information
technology.
The Secretary-General recommends action in these
areas:
Identifying our core strengths. The UN’s influence
derives not from power but from the values it
represents, its role in helping to set and sustain
global norms, its ability to stimulate global
concern and action; and the trust inspired by its
practical work to improve people’s lives. We must
build on those strengths, especially by insisting on
the importance of the rule of law. But we also need
to adapt the UN itself, notably by reforming the
Security Council so it can both work effectively and
enjoy unquestioned legitimacy. And we must expand
the UN’s relationship with civil society
organizations, as well as with the private sector
and foundations.
Networking for change. We must supplement formal
institutions with informal policy networks, bringing
together international institutions, civil society
and private sector organizations, and national
governments, in pursuit of common goals.
Making digital connections. We can use the new
information technology to make the UN more
efficient, and to improve its interaction with the
rest of the world. But to do so we must overcome a
change-resistant culture. The Secretary-General is
asking the information technology industry to help
us do it.
Advancing the quiet revolution. To meet the needs of
the 21st century we need real structural reform, a
clearer consensus on priorities among Member States,
and less intrusive oversight of day-to-day
management. Decisions are needed from the General
Assembly - for instance to include "sunset
provisions" in new mandates and to introduce
results-based budgeting.
VII. For consideration by the Summit
The Secretary-General lists six shared values,
reflecting the spirit of the Charter, which are of
particular relevance to the new century: Freedom;
Equity and Solidarity; Tolerance; Non-Violence;
Respect for Nature; and Shared Responsibility. He
urges the Millennium Summit to adopt a series of
resolutions, drawn from the body of the Report, as
an earnest of its will to act on those values.