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LUGAR DEMANDS PROGRESS ON MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS On June 27,
2005, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Richard G.
Lugar (R, IN) introduced
S.1315, the International Cooperation to Meet the Millennium Development
Goals Act of 2005. The bill would call for a required report
on progress toward the
Millennium
Development Goals, among other things.
If enacted, the bill would require a report no later than sixty days after the date of the
conclusion of the World Trade Organization Ministerial meeting in Hong Kong,
scheduled to be held December 13 through December 18, 2005. The report would
be given by the Secretary of State in consultation with other appropriate
United States and international agencies and given to the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee.
The content of the report would include the following:
• A review of the commitments made by the United States and other members of
the international community, at the summit of the Group of Eight [Canada,
France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia, the United Kingdom, and the United
States] (July 2005), the United Nations summit (September 2005), and the
Sixth Ministerial Conference of the World Trade Organization (December 2005)
• A review of United States policies and progress toward achieving the
Millennium Development Goals by 2015, as well as policies to provide
continued leadership in achieving such goals by 2015.
• An evaluation of the contributions of other national and international
actors in achieving the Millennium Development Goals by 2015.
• An assessment of the likelihood that the Millennium Development Goals will
be achieved.
Senator Lugar’s bill was introduced to the Senate on June 27, 2005 and then
referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations. The Senator’s bill is an
important chance for the United States to monitor the progress of the
Millennium Development Goals and allows for the United States to continually
check and recheck their own role in achieving the Millennium Development
Goals.
Updated June 30, 2005
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