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42 NGOs Sign Letter Calling on President
Bush to Play a Productive Role at Upcoming UN Summit
Washington, DC – A group of 42 diverse and prominent
NGOs joined forces today, authoring a letter to President Bush, urging him to
take a productive role at the upcoming UN Summit to be held in New York City
from September 13-16, 2005. The letter,
linked here
and pasted below, calls on the President, Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice, UN Ambassador John R. Bolton and Under Secretary of State Nicholas Burns
to push for critical reforms as well as a constructive agenda on development,
security, democracy and human rights.
The letter was sent directly to the White House, State
Department U.S Mission to the UN in New York, and Senators Joseph Biden (D-DE)
and Richard Lugar (R-IN). It reads:
“The UN must modernize to meet 21st century challenges…
U.S. leadership is vital to achieve the summit’s goal of revitalizing the UN. We
urge the full engagement of your Administration to build broad support, both at
home and abroad, for a stronger, more effective United Nations.”
Don Kraus, Executive Vice President for Citizens for Global
Solutions noted: “This is yet another clear demonstration that U.S. civil
society wants the Bush Administration to work constructively for a stronger more
effective United Nations. The President, as well as Ambassador Bolton, should
respond by playing an engaged role in negotiating a successful outcome document
leading up to the UN Summit. “
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Note to the Editor: Citizens for Global Solutions is a
non-partisan, membership organization that envisions a future in which nations
work together to abolish war, protect our rights and freedoms, and solve the
problems facing humanity that no nation can solve alone.
September 9, 2005
The Honorable George W. Bush
President of the United States of America
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20500
Dear Mr. President:
Next week, over 170 world leaders will gather together at
the 60th Annual General Assembly Summit of the United Nations. We sincerely
hope that you and other Administration officials will be present to work with
these world leaders to advance critical reforms being considered at this
historic Summit and to promote the UN’s role in realizing Member States’
shared commitment to achieving the Millennium Development Goals.
At the center of this year’s General Assembly agenda is the
advancement of unprecedented initiatives to improve the United Nations. Every
institution needs periodic retooling to meet new challenges. After 60 years,
the UN is no exception. The UN must modernize to meet 21st century challenges
ranging from security and terrorism to poverty, disease and sustainable
development. U.S. leadership is vital to achieve the summit’s goal of
revitalizing the UN. We urge the full engagement of your Administration to
build broad support, both at home and abroad, for a stronger, more effective
United Nations.
Many of the reforms that will be considered were included
in Secretary-General Kofi Annan’s report, “In Larger Freedom: Towards
Development, Security, and Human Rights for All.” Moreover, the creation of a
new Human Rights Council, the Democracy Fund and a Peacekeeping Commission are
important common sense initiatives that enjoy bipartisan support and are
included in the State Department’s “U.S. Priorities for a Stronger, More
Effective United Nations.”
Now more than ever, an effective and accountable United
Nations is critical to U.S. interests. The United States and many other UN
members face pressing international challenges from the nuclear programs of
North Korea and Iran to the ongoing violence in Sudan. No single nation should
bear the entire burden and cost of resolving these international challenges.
Therefore, it is imperative that the UN be even more capable of working
effectively with the United States to meet these complex and costly
challenges. We have many recent examples such as tsunami relief in Southeast
Asia, the elections in Afghanistan and the peace agreement in Sudan of the
UN’s ability to promote peace, democracy and development around the globe. We
must ensure the UN can continue to replicate and improve on such successes,
while also committing to a responsibility to protect civilians from future
atrocities, including genocide.
The Summit is also an opportunity to improve the lives of
the most impoverished of the world by affirming the Millennium Development
Goals and committing to concrete policies on development. All nations, both
rich and poor, must work together to reduce poverty through timebound,
measurable internationally agreed development goals that promote good
governance and sustainability. In our view, the Millennium Development Goals
represent this important mutual partnership between developed and developing
countries. We urge you to state the U.S. commitment to these goals during this
historic summit.
In the words of former House Speaker Newt Gingrich and
former Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell, “just as the United States took
the lead in forging the consensus that led to the creation of the United
Nations after WWII, we believe the United States, in its own interests, must
lead the organization toward greater relevance and capability in this new
era.”
We once again urge you and your administration to take a
productive role in helping to adopt a comprehensive and constructive agenda on
development, security, democracy and human rights, and reform that will be
discussed at the upcoming 60th UN General Assembly meeting. Such an outcome
would be beneficial to U.S. national interests and to a long term effective
United Nations.
Sincerely,
20/20 Vision*
African Medical & Research Foundation USA
The American Humanist Association
American Progress Action Fund
Baha'is of the United States
Better World Campaign
British American Security Information Council (BASIC)
The Center for Health and Gender Equity (CHANGE)
Church Women United
Church World Service
Citizens for Global Solutions
Coalition for American Leadership Abroad
Concern Worldwide
Council for a Livable World
Democracy Coalition Project
The Fund for Peace
The General Federation of Women's Clubs
Global AIDS Alliance
Heifer International
The Humpty Dumpty Institute
International Crisis Group
International Relations Center
International Relief and Development
International Rescue Committee
MercyCorps
National Wildlife Federation
Open Society Policy Center
Oxford Council on Good Governance
Physicians for Human Rights
Physicians for Social Responsibility
Population Action International
Presbyterian Church (USA)
Refugees International
Robert F. Kennedy Center for Human Rights
The Stanley Foundation
United Methodist Church, General Board of Church and Society
United Nations Association of the USA
United Nations Foundation
U.S. Chapter of Global Action to Prevent War
Women's Action for New Directions
Women's Edge Coalition
Women's Environment and Development Organization
*More organizations may be added.
Cc: Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
Ambassador John R. Bolton
Under Secretary of State Nicholas Burns
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Contact:
Sam Stein
Communications Associate
202 546 3950 ext 123
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