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people of African descent could be made more visible and easily available and could inform
policy- making.
23.
Mr. Kasanda recalled that the Working Group had stressed the fact that people of African
descent were largely invisible because they were often absent or excluded from domestic data
collection, statistical analysis and programming, as well as from national public life and the
media. The collection of disaggregated data was a crucial exercise to understand patterns of
inequality. The recording of achievement of the Goals, if not based on disaggregated results,
could mask groups that were missing out.
24.
Mr. Kasanda submitted that for each of the Millennium Development Goals, a specific
analysis based upon the situation of people of African descent could help improve social
inclusion and development interventions. Strategies to mainstream the situation of people of
African descent into plans for achieving the Goals would have to take into account the following
questions: the advantages of achieving the Goals with the inclusion of ethnic groups; how to
focus on and to identify disadvantaged groups in a society without creating any stigma; and how
to ensure that ethnic communities supported the plans for the achievement of the Goals. He
recalled that the process towards the attainment of the Goals involved all concerned
stakeholders: States, NGOs, people of African descent and national human rights Institutions.
Each of these actors had a role and should have a say in the monitoring and evaluating of
development strategies towards the achievement of the Goals.
25.
Mr. John McArthur, Deputy Director of the United Nations Millennium Project, made a
presentation by video- link from New York on the role of the Millennium Development Goals in
combating discrimination. He raised the question as to how to meet the targets and how to
incorporate the Goals into planning perspectives for 2015, while addressing systematic
inequalities. While there are a number of global strategic partnerships for development, there is
not yet a goal-oriented system. The Goals needed to be translated into operational and practical
goals and there was the necessity of coordinating core practical successes at the national and
international levels. The issue at stake was that of taking seriously the goals, to turn them into
concrete actions. Each country was empowered to achieve these goals, however, it was important
to identify the constraints on the ground and deve lop means to overcome them.
26.
The country level is the key playing field for achieving the Millennium Development
Goals through processes leading to community empowerment strategies and the active
participation of civil society and marginalized groups, so as to achieve “universal access”. He
also discussed the importance of indicators to measure the impact of policies and actions aimed
at achieving the Goals, which he linked to the question of investments and planning. He
discussed the role of the United Nations in this regard and elaborated on the key role to be
played by United Nations Country Teams, through a participatory approach involving civil
society and the international financial institutions, in ensuring that the Goals were translated into
the empowerment of those countries that were disempowered at the international level.
27.
Ms. Edna Maria Santos Roland, a member of the Group of independent eminent experts,
submitted that the Millennium Declaration was specially focused on policies and measures to
enhance the development indicators of the general population of a given country and, at the
global level, to reduce the inequalities between developed countries and developing countries
and economies in transition. One year before the World Conference against Racism, the