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The
Millennium Development Goals Report 2006
United Nations (UN)
2006
http://mdgs.un.org/unsd/mdg/Resources/Static/Products/Progress2006/MDGReport2006.pdf
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Foreword
Six years ago, leaders from every country agreed on a vision for
the future - a world with less poverty, hunger and disease, greater
survival prospects for mothers and their infants, better educated
children, equal opportunities for women, and a healthier environment;
a world in which developed and developing countries worked in partnership
for the betterment of all. This vision took the shape of eight Millennium
Development Goals, which are providing countries around the world
a framework for development, and time-bound targets by which progress
can be measured.
This report shows where we stand in
2006 in achieving these goals. The challenges the Goals represent
are staggering. But there are clear signs of hope. The data
on the following pages and other evidence suggest that providing
every child with a primary school education is within our grasp.
The handful of countries in sub-Saharan Africa that are successfully
lowering HIV infection rates and expanding treatment demonstrate
that the war against AIDS can be won. Step by step, we see that
women are gaining in political participation that will one day result
in their full equal rights. Developed countries have confirmed their
commitment to the Goals through increased aid and enhanced debt
relief. Collectively, the developed and developing countries mustered
the political will to find a solution to the destruction of the
ozone layer - a demonstration that we can work together on global
environmental challenges.
Yet we also know that disparities in
progress, both among and within countries, are vast, and that the
poorest among us, mostly those in remote rural areas, are being
left behind. Much more can and must be done, both by developed countries
in increasing their support and by developing countries in using
foreign assistance and their own resources more effectively.
This publication embodies the collaborative
efforts of agencies and organizations within and outside the United
Nations system, working through the Inter-agency and Expert Group
on MDG Indicators. It contains the latest and most comprehensive
figures available through improved data collection and monitoring
worldwide. Similar data will be collected and presented each year
until 2015, the target date for the Millennium Development Goals,
in an effort to give further direction and focus to international
cooperation and national action.
The present report shows that some
progress has been made. This should provide the incentive
to keep moving forward. But as the following pages also show, there
is still a long way to go to keep our promises to current and future
generations.
José
Antonio Ocampo
Under-Secretary-General for Economic and Social Affairs
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