Violence is a serious cause of poverty, the UN needs to address this
The Millennium
Development Goals have become one of the most positive initiatives
fostered by the United Nations
during these first years of the 21st century. Humanity has made significant
progress in advancing a world free of poverty
and social exclusion, while showing that such a goal is not just desirable but
also achievable. The progress made in a few years used to take decades to
become a reality. Today, fewer children die of preventable diseases, more girls
are educated and the fight against HIV-Aids has become a global public health
priority.
Different voices have raised
suggestions and concerns about how to move forward when we reach the deadline
set for the MDGs in 2015. Happily, most voices agree that we have to follow a
similar path, as was shown in the Rio+20 conference held in Brazil. There, the international
community suggested that new global goals should be set for the future, after
2015, combining poverty reduction targets with sustainable development
concerns. This means that the architecture of the new global goals should be
built in two pillars: reducing poverty and promoting sustainable development.
My government supports this approach
and we expect that the UN will embrace such a framework with enthusiasm and
commitment.
None the less, I also believe that the
new global goals will fall short of what is expected of them if the
international community cannot also agree on specific targets aimed at ensuring
universal access to justice and reduction of extreme violence for vulnerable
groups.
My country, Guatemala,
continues to suffer from multiple forms of violence and high levels of
impunity. Based on our experience, I can affirm that extreme violence,
insecurity and limited access to justice are factors that prevent development
in general, and particularly ensure the continuation of poverty and social
exclusion. Let me explain this.
First, violence suffered by women,
children and other vulnerable groups translates into impunity because a large
proportion of people have limited or no access to justice. Impunity derived
from low coverage and poor quality of justice is one of the major drivers of
poverty (and intergenerational reproduction of poverty), because long exposure
to a violent environment prevents otherwise perfectly healthy women and
children gaining access to economic and social opportunities that may help them
escape from the poverty trap.
Second, violence reproduces violence
itself. The vicious circle of violence and impunity transforms many vulnerable
groups into agents that reproduce abuse and mistreatment from one generation to
another.
But a life without extreme violence is
not just desirable, it is also possible. Actually, in my home country, we have
demonstrated in the last three years – and particularly in the last 10 months
of my administration – that fighting impunity and reducing murder is possible.
Our homicide rate has reduced in a sustained manner and I can proudly say that
we are not far from the day when there will not be a single homicide in one week.
Allow me to be bold on this. Extreme
violence and impunity are still too high in Guatemala by international
standards. But if we can claim some progress even in these difficult
circumstances, why can't the world set a goal that will allow thousands to live
a life free of violence?
The progress made in Guatemala would
not have been possible without the support of the international community. The
UN and bilateral co-operation have played the right role of strengthening the
justice system and they have helped us particularly in enhancing the state's
capacity for crime prosecution and crime prevention. This support, combined
with the right national policies and national leadership, shows that a world
free of extreme violence and with universal access to justice is desirable and
possible.
Women, children and other vulnerable
groups deserve to live in a world without poverty, but they also deserve a
world without extreme violence. Humanity can make a big jump towards living on
a better planet if we set global development goals aimed at poverty reduction,
protecting the environment, and reducing extreme violence.
We should pass our children and
grandchildren a planet that is free from want, free from extreme abuse and
environmentally friendly. A planet where all people are treated in a dignified
manner, no matter their country of birth, the colour of their skin, their sex
or sexual preference, their age or their private wealth. A world that is,
finally, free from fear.
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