Friday, 7 April 2000
Mr Secretary General,
Distinguished Guests,
1. It gives me great pleasure to welcome you all on the occasion of the
meeting in Rome of the Administrative Committee on Coordination of the
United Nations system. Recognizing the work undertaken by your Committee
for the good of peoples around the world, I pray that God will give you
and all taking part in your meeting the gift of wise discernment in your
deliberations. Thank you, Mr Secretary General, for your kind words of
presentation, and I am certain that your recent Millennium Report
will serve as an excellent framework for the Committees work during
these days.
As that report makes clear, the millennium just ended has left in its
wake a series of unusual challenges. These challenges are unusual not
because they are new there have always been wars, persecutions,
poverty, disasters and epidemics but because the worlds
increasing interdependence has given them a global dimension, which
requires new ways of thinking and new types of international cooperation
if they are to be effectively met. At the dawn of the new millennium,
humanity has the means to do this. The United Nations, in fact, and the
large family of specialized organizations represented by you are the
natural forum for developing such a mentality and strategy of
international solidarity.
In the task of formulating this new perspective, the Administrative
Committee on Coordination has a fundamental role to play. It brings
together the most senior members of the different specialized agencies,
under the direction of the Secretary General, for the express purpose of
coordinating the various policies and programmes. This is why your
Committee has concentrated its reflections and efforts on the implications
of globalization for development, on the socio- economic causes of
humanitarian crises and of the persistent conflicts in Africa and other
parts of the world, and on the institutional capacity of the United
Nations system to respond to new international challenges.
2. The unbounded expansion of world commerce and the amazing progress in
the fields of technology, communications and information exchange are all
part of a dynamic process that tends to abolish the distances separating
peoples and continents. However, the ability to exercise influence in this
new global setting is not the same for all nations, but is more or less
tied to a countrys economic and technological capacity. The new
situation is such that, in many cases, decisions with worldwide
consequences are made only by a small, restricted group of nations. Other
nations either manage often with great effort to bring these
decisions into line with what is in the interest of their citizens or
as happens with the weakest countries they try simply to adjust to
these decisions as best they can, sometimes with negative consequences for
their people. The majority of the worlds nations, therefore, are
experiencing a weakening of the State in its capacity to serve the common
good and promote social justice and harmony.
Moreover, the globalization of the economy is leading to a globalization
of society and culture. In this context, Non-Governmental Organizations,
representing a very broad spectrum of special interests, are becoming ever
more important in international life. And perhaps one of the best results
of their action so far is the awareness which they are creating of the
need to move from an attitude of defence and promotion of particular and
competing special interests to a holistic vision of development. A case in
point is their increasing success in creating a keener awareness in
industrialized countries of their shared responsibility for the problems
facing less developed countries. The campaign to reduce or cancel the
foreign debt of the poorest nations is another example, though not the
only one, of a growing sense of international solidarity.
3. The growth of this new awareness in society presents the United
Nations system with a unique opportunity to contribute to the
globalization of solidarity by serving as a meeting place for States and
civil society and as a convergence of the varied interests and needs
regional and particular of the world at large. Cooperation between
International Agencies and Non-Governmental Organizations will help to
ensure that the interests of States legitimate though they may be
and of the different groups within them, will not be invoked or defended
at the expense of the interests or rights of other peoples, especially the
less fortunate. Political and economic activity conducted in a spirit of
international solidarity can and ought to lead to the voluntary limitation
of unilateral advantages so that other countries and peoples may share in
the same benefits. In this way the social and economic well-being of
everyone is served.
At the dawn of the twenty-first century, the challenge is to build a
world in which individuals and peoples fully and unequivocally accept
responsibility for their fellow human beings, for all the earths
inhabitants. Your work can do much to empower the multilateral system to
bring about such international solidarity. The premise of all this effort
is the recognition of the dignity and centrality of every human being as
an equal member of the human family and, for believers, as Gods
equal children. The task then is to ensure the acceptance at every level
of society of the logical consequences of our shared human dignity, and to
guarantee respect for that dignity in every situation.
4. In this regard, I must express my deep concern when I see that
certain groups try to impose on the international community ideological
views or patterns of life advocated by small and particular segments of
society. This is perhaps most obvious in such fields as the defence of
life and the safeguarding of the family. The leaders of Nations must be
careful not to overturn what the international community and law have
laboriously developed to preserve the dignity of the human person and the
cohesion of society. This is a common patrimony which no one has the right
to dissipate.
Invoking divine guidance upon every effort and undertaking of your
Committee in its mission of coordinating the activities of the United
Nations system, I pray that your work will be thoroughly pervaded by a
generous and ambitious spirit of global solidarity. God bless you, Mr
Secretary General, and all who are gathered with you at this meeting!
*Insegnamenti di Giovanni Paolo II, vol. XXIII, 1 p.553-556.
L'Osservatore Romano 8.4.2000 p.5.
L'Osservatore Romano. Weekly Edition in English n. 15 p.4.
© Copyright 2000 - Libreria Editrice Vaticana
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