Monday, June 28, 2010

Ethiopia in absolute progress to meet MDGs - Study Shows


Sunday 27 June 2010

By Tesfa –Alem Tekle

June 26, 2010 (ADDIS ABABA) – A new Research released this week reveled that Ethiopia is one of the leading 20 countries making most Progress to achieve the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).

The new analysis issued by the Overseas Development Institute (ODI) and the United Nations Millennium Campaign finds that, in absolute terms, many of the world’s poorest countries are making the most overall progress towards achieving the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) - the set of promises world leaders made to significantly reduce extreme poverty, illiteracy and disease by 2015.

Eleven of the 20 countries making the most absolute progress on the MDGs are amongst the poorest countries in Africa; half of African countries are on track to meet the target of halving poverty by 2015.it said.

Accordingly, Benin, Bangladesh, Mali Honduras, Ethiopia, Mauritania, Gambia, Ghana, Malawi, China, Viet Nam, Burkina Faso, Uganda, Rwanda, Nepal, Nicaragua, India, Guatemala, Cambodia and Togo are listed as countries most in progress.

"This study decisively establishes with hard evidence that much of the negative reporting on progress on the Millennium Development Goals is misleading," said Salil Shetty, Director of the United Nations Millennium Campaign.

"Instead of lamenting that Africa might miss the MDG targets, we should be celebrating the real changes that have happened in the lives of millions of poor people, not least because of the unified effort between governments and citizens, supported by donors”

The United Nations Millennium Campaign has called on the leaders and tax-payers of G-8 countries to keep their aid commitments, with the confidence that their investment is making a tangible and large scale difference.

This study seeks to broaden the debate about MDG progress says Overseas Development Institute Director Dr. Alison Evans adding the first findings show that progress is taking place, sometimes in unexpected places.

"In a world where support for development is under increasing scrutiny, we hope that this work will contribute to a broader appreciation of how we assess progress to date."

The analysis focused on progress on Goal 1, which seeks to eradicate extreme poverty and hunger; Goal 4, to reduce child mortality; and Goal 5, to improve maternal health – all issues on the agenda of this week’s G-8. Amongst the findings:

The largest number of reductions of deaths of children under the age of five occurred in regions with the highest initial levels of such deaths, such as sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia.

Even though the Goal of reducing maternal mortality has seen the least progress, access to maternal health services has improved in 80 percent of countries.

The research identified a number of additional factors that contribute to progress on the MDGs: poor countries must have consistent leadership committed over an extended period of time to reducing poverty.

(ST)

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