UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan on Wednesday called on world
leaders to adopt and implement a blueprint to reform the UN and
carry on the process by agreeing on other divisive reform
issues.
Annan issued the call in an address at the opening of a summit
of around 150 heads of state and government and representatives
from 41 other countries, which is the largest-ever gathering of
such kind in the UN history.
"We must implement what has been agreed," said Annan, referring
to a water-downed document for promoting development, strengthening
the global collective mechanism and revitalizing the UN system.
The document, finalized Tuesday after days of marathon
negotiations, calls for the establishment of a peace building
commission, a human rights council, a democracy fund and continued
support for the implementation of the millennium development
goals.
"We must get the peace-building commission and the human rights
council up and running, conclude a comprehensive convention on
terrorism, and make sure the democracy fund starts working
effectively," he said.
While describing the document as a "far-reaching package of
changes," Annan also expressed disappointment about the failure to
obtain a more substantive blueprint.
"We have not yet achieved the sweeping and fundamental reform
that I and many others believe is required. Sharp differences, some
of them substantive and legitimate, have played their part in
preventing that," he noted.
Annan urged world leaders to "keep working with determination on
the tough issues on which progress is urgent but has not yet been
achieved."
"Because one thing has emerged clearly from the process on which
we embarked two years ago: whatever our differences, in our
interdependent world, we stand or fall together," he explained.
"That is why a healthy, effective UN is so vital. If properly
utilized, it can be a unique marriage of power and principle, in
the service of all the world's peoples," he stressed.
"No matter how frustrating things are, no matter how difficult
agreement is, there is no escaping the fact that the challenges of
our time must be met by action -- and today, more than ever, action
must be collective if it is to be effective."
"I urge you, as world leaders, individually and collectively, to
keep working on this reform agenda -- to have the patience to
persevere, and the vision needed to forge a real consensus."
(Xinhua News Agency September 15, 2005)