On Monday, the UN high officials said on the parliamentary platform that for the next ten years, new plans for land reality, political will and the development of concrete laws are very important.
There are 32 countries in the world, which are not connected to the sea, where about 50 million population lives and most of these countries come under the division of the world’s lowly developed countries.
These countries are constantly being left behind due to high transport spent, limited access to global markets and increasing climate change.
Lack of financial resources
“These challenges are not only because of the geographical location, but also the inferior obstacles such as underdeveloped infrastructure, limited export capacity and lack of financial institutions,” the United Nations High Commissioner and LLDCS chief Rabab Fatima says Rabab Fatima.
He said that the population of these countries is the percent percentage of the world’s total population, but only 1 percent of their part in the Global Gross Domestic Product (GDP).
Trade expenditure here is 30 percent higher than in coastal countries, and only 61 percent of people have electricity facilities, and the average worldwide is 92 percent. More than 40 percent of people are also connected to the Internet.
New aspects
Describing the ‘Auja Conference’ as an important stop and Cierry Roadmap, High Commissioner Rabab Fatema said that concrete steps need to be taken at the national level for the successful implementation of this project.
He urged the members of parliament to connect their country’s strategies to this project, ensure financial resources, promote trade and regional integration and form a parliamentary group to implement.
High Commissioner Rabab Fatima told the representatives, “You are not only the law, but also the carrier of change. Your role will ensure that the AOAja Conference has presented a view and sustainable results for million4 million people.”
Parliament
Philome Young, president of the United Nations General Assembly, further reiterated that parliamentary role at the national level has a significant role in realizing global commitments.
He said that Parliament prepares legal structure for development and determines the budget direction in cases such as education, health and climate.
Citing the ‘advisory vote’ of the international court of the International Court of International Court, Chairman Young has said that the climate action is now the legal responsibility of all countries.
He emphasized that the parliaments surpass the policies and act as a bridge between the public and the government and monitor the better use of public money.
Call for global cooperation
“We need to strengthen the partnership between our National Assembly and the global organization, so that we can fulfill the promise of sustainable development on the basis of peace, prosperity and dignity,” he said.
Through this conference it has become clear that if the future of the Bhumibad developing countries (LLDC) has to be changed, the law makers have to lead this change not only by speech and concrete fighting and partnerships.