MIGIRO
STRESSES ROLE OF PHILANTHROPY IN ACHIEVING GLOBAL DEVELOPMENT
GOALS
New York,
Feb 25 2008 5:00PM
Corporate giving can play an important role in advancing the
global anti-poverty targets known as the Millennium Development
Goals (MDGs), the Deputy Secretary-General told more than
200 top executives and business leaders at a special event
of the United Nations Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC)
today.
“Enhanced
cooperation between the different actors represented here
today, especially through a better understanding of corporate
giving strategies, would add great value to the overall development
effort,” Asha-Rose Migiro told the gathering of leaders
from such companies as Merrill Lynch, Microsoft, and Goldman
Sachs & Co.
The event was co-organized by the UN Office for Partnerships
(UNOP) and the Committee Encouraging Corporate Philanthropy
(CECP) – a global forum bringing together corporate
leaders who think about philanthropy as part of their business
model.
Pointing
to the emergence and rapid growth in recent years of corporate
and individual giving, she said that the UN “welcomes
this trend as a wonderful embodiment of the universal human
values of justice, fairness, compassion and equality.
“We
see philanthropy’s immense potential to help people
as they strive for a better life with dignity and hope,”
she added. “We need to better understand it, and help
direct its benefits effectively and efficiently.”
In recent
years, the Organization has been opening its doors to more
partners, and more innovative partnerships, she noted, adding
that “every UN agency, fund and programme is rethinking
the way we work in light of this effort.”
This “new
age of partnership” is crucial in addressing global
challenges such as climate change – one of the UN’s
top priorities. “Many of you have a leading role to
play in this, not only as corporate philanthropists but also
as senior managers of large corporations whose decisions crucially
affect consumption and production patterns,” she noted.
It will
not be possible to successfully address such pressing issues
without cooperation between Member States and the world’s
leading private sector representatives, the Deputy Secretary-General
added.
Echoing
her comments, ECOSOC President Léo Mérorès
said that governments cannot achieve internationally agreed
development goals on their own, adding that “the active
involvement of all parts of society is critical if we are
to succeed.” He added that today’s meeting can
provide valuable inputs to ECOSOC’s first Development
Cooperation Forum, to be held in New York in July, as well
as the annual ministerial review of progress towards development
goals.
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For
more details go to UN News Centre at http://www.un.org/news