Africa: Post-2015 Agenda Must Boost Links Among of Development, Security, Human Rights – UN Chief

Posted: January 22, 2015 at 4:43 am

Stressing that the United Nations is built around the three pillars of peace and security, development and human rights, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, today underlined the need pay attention to their interdependence, during an address to the Security Council.

"The founders of the United Nations well understood that if we ignore one pillar, we imperil the other two," said Mr. Ban during today's Security Council debate on inclusive development for the maintenance of international peace and security.

"The post-2015 sustainable development agenda is an important opportunity to reinforce the interdependence of development, peace and security, and human rights," he told the Council debate, which coincides with the opening of the General Assembly's three-day informal 'stock-taking' in the process of intergovernmental negotiations on that future agenda.

The Secretary-General said he was encouraged that during debates so far held about completing the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) by the end of this year, launching a post-2015 sustainability agenda, and reaching an agreement on climate change, Member States had paid considerable attention to peace and security and to human rights.

The General Assembly Open Working Group on Sustainable Development Goals had discussed the importance of inclusive growth and decent work, called for reducing inequality and ensuring universal access to basic services, including health care and education, had explicitly linked peace with social inclusion and access to justice for all, and had called for inclusive, representative decision-making.

In the so called 'synthesis' report he presented to the General Assembly last month - The Road to Dignity by 2030: Ending Poverty, Transforming All Lives and Protecting the Planet - Mr. Ban underscored the importance of justice to building peaceful and inclusive societies, emphasising the need for strong and responsive institutions.

"With the full membership of the United Nations beginning its negotiations later this morning, we now have an important opportunity to broaden the development agenda and highlight the fundamental importance of inclusive societies in building a more peaceful world," he said.

Every country could benefit from sustainable and inclusive development, tackling persistent exclusion and inequality, ensuring that the most vulnerable have access to basic services and can participate in political dialogue, tackling the "blatant injustice" of discrimination against women and girls, and extending social security provision to the world's population still lacking a safety net for times of illness or unemployment.

Post-conflict societies in particular need to prioritize social, economic and political inclusion in order to rebuild trust between communities. Women's participation in reconciliation and reconstruction also depended on gender equality and women's empowerment, he said.

"The Peacebuilding Commission provides coordinated international support targeted at countries emerging from conflict," continued Mr. Ban. "The current review of the UN's peacebuilding architecture should help to make that support more robust and flexible."

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Africa: Post-2015 Agenda Must Boost Links Among of Development, Security, Human Rights - UN Chief

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