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SECRETARY-GENERAL CALLS FOR A DEAL BY WORLD LEADERS ON POVERTY, SECURITY AND HUMAN RIGHTS
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OFFICIAL VISITS:
PRESIDENT'S VISIT TO SAUDI ARABIA
PRESIDENT'S VISIT TO CHINA
PRESIDENT'S VISIT TO POLAND
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UNDP BRINGS TOGETHER ALL RELIGIOUS FAITHS IN AZERBAIJAN TO FIGHT HIV/AIDS
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WFP SURVEY SHOWS FOOD INSECURITY THREATENS RURAL AND DISPLACED AZERBAIJANIS
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PRESIDENT RECEIVES HEADS OF UNECE AND UNESCAP
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FIRST REPORT ON EXTRACTIVE INDUSTRIES TRANSPARENCY INITIATIVE PRODUCED
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AZERBAIJAN REACTS ON RESULTS OF OSCE FACT-FINDING MISSION TO OCCUPIED TERRITORIES
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AZERBAIJAN, ARMENIA APPEAL TO UN OVER CEASEFIRE VIOLATIONS
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PRESIDENT FREES POLITICAL PRISONERS
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OMBUDSMAN REPORTS TO PARLIAMENT ON 2004 ACTIVITIES
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MAJOR OPPOSITION PARTIES TO JOINTLY RUN FOR PARLIAMENTARY ELECTION
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PRESIDENT ALIYEV ELECTED CHAIRMAN OF RULING NEW AZERBAIJAN PARTY
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GOVERNMENT PRESENTS 2004 REPORT
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PRESIDENT OPENS THE FREIGHT TERMINAL AT THE HEYDAR ALIYEV INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT
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AZERBAIJAN AND THE WORLD BANK AGREE ON THE FIRST TRANCH OF POVERTY REDUCTION CREDIT
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ILHAM ALIYEV ISSUED DECREE TO LIQUIDATE STATE TELEVISION
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SERIOUS CRIMINAL GROUP RENDERED HARMLESS
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| SECRETARY-GENERAL CALLS FOR A DEAL BY WORLD LEADERS ON POVERTY, SECURITY AND HUMAN RIGHTS
UNITED NATIONS, NEW YORK, 20 March - Secretary-General Kofi Annan today called on leaders to reach a new global deal to tackle the challenges of development, security and human rights, and to overhaul the United Nations. The recommendations in his report, titled In larger freedom: Towards development, security and human rights for all, lay the groundwork for decisions at the upcoming summit of world leaders at the UN in September 2005. Taking its name from a key phrase of the UN Charter, which speaks of social progress and better standards of life "in larger freedom", the report promotes a realignment of the world body to give additional weight to key development, security and human rights issues, while setting out plans to make the UN more efficient, open and accountable.
Taking its name from a key phrase of the UN Charter, which speaks of social progress and better standards of life "in larger freedom", the report promotes a realignment of the world body to give additional weight to key development, security and human rights issues, while setting out plans to make the UN more efficient, open and accountable. Its recommendations are drawn in part from the conclusions of two UN-commissioned panels on collective security and on the anti-poverty Millennium Development Goals, as well as promises made in the Millennium Declaration of 2000.
The Secretary-General stressed that the report's proposals should be viewed as an achievable package, to which Member States can agree in September: "These are reforms that are within reach."
Key proposals include:
Development
- Developing countries to implement national action plans to meet the Millennium Development Goals, supported by increased development assistance by developed countries, including meeting their commitment to meet the 0.7 per cent target of gross national income by 2015 or sooner;
- Mitigating the impact of climate change by mobilizing science and technology and committing to a more inclusive international framework for stabilizing greenhouse gas emissions following the expiration of the Kyoto Protocol in 2012;
Security
- Agreement on a comprehensive convention against terrorism based on a clear and agreed definition, as part of a broader strategy to prevent catastrophic terrorism;
- States to complete, sign and implement a fissile material cut-off treaty to reduce the risks of proliferation of nuclear materials;
- Creation of a UN Peacebuilding Commission to help win the peace in post-conflict countries;
Human rights
Replacement of the Commission on Human Rights with a smaller, more-empowered standing UN Human Rights Council;
All States to embrace the "responsibility to protect" as a basis for collective action against genocide, ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity;
Establishment of a Democracy Fund to provide funding and technical assistance to countries seeking to establish or strengthen their democracy;
UN renewal
- Expansion of the UN Security Council to make it more broadly representative of the international community as a whole and the geopolitical realities of today;
- Streamlining of the Secretariat to be more flexible, transparent and accountable in serving the priorities of Member States and the interests of the world's peoples.
Report on Implementing the Millennium Declaration In larger freedom: Towards development, security and human rights for all (full report)
Related reports:
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April 2005, Issue No. 24
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LET ANCIENT HOLIDAY NOVRUZ BRING JOY
March 18, Baku Sun

BAKU - Azerbaijan, best known as the land of fires, is - according to the British Museum's scientific team - also the site of the Gardens of Eden. When Sumerians - the first Turkic civilization, who rose as far back as 5,000 years BC - started preparations for New Year's celebrations, they sent envoys to the 'Gardens,' for sacred wheat seeds. It was strongly believed that sprouted wheat from the 'Gardens' would help to cultivate and gather bounteous harvest in the New Year that - according to Sumer augurs - comes into its own with the flooding of the Tigris and Euphrates, the crucial sources of fresh water in the overwhelmingly arid Mesopotamia [modern day Iraq].
The tradition has been kept alive: Novruz, the most cherished holiday in modern day Azerbaijan, also remains a deep-rooted tradition in Afghanistan, Iran, Turkey and Central Asian nations, including Kazakhstan. Though, nowadays, there is no need to travel to Azerbaijan for sacral seeds, as - again according to British Museum scientists - the Gardens have sunk into oblivion, under what presently is known as the city of Tabriz, the centuries-old 'custodian' of the Azeri heritage.
Novruz [the word meaning 'new day' in Farsi] marks the exhilaration of nature. The holiday, however, has other meanings too, as it has inherited much from all major cultures that celebrated it in the areas stretching out from the Balkans to the Altais, the original realms of the Turkic- and Finn-Ugor-language nations.
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