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A-RES-74-299-fr-parsed | 28. Invites Member States, with the participation of employers and workers, to develop public policies aimed at reducing the number of road accidents occurring in the professional environment, in order to ensure compliance with international standards on occupational safety and health, road safety and desirable conditi... | operative |
A-RES-74-299-fr-parsed | 29. Also invites Member States to provide early access to rehabilitation and the possibility of reintegration into society, including in the workplace, as soon as possible, for persons injured or disabled as a result of a road accident and to provide comprehensive support to victims and their families; | operative |
A-RES-74-299-fr-parsed | 31. Invites Member States to support, to the extent necessary, the work of the Special Envoy of the Secretary-General for Road Safety, and invites the Secretary-General to consider maintaining the function of Special Envoy for Road Safety until the end of the Second Decade of Action for Road Safety; | operative |
A-RES-74-299-fr-parsed | 33. Requests the World Health Organization, the regional commissions of the United Nations and other relevant organizations of the United Nations system to continue their efforts to achieve the road safety targets of the 2030 Agenda, while ensuring system-wide coherence; | operative |
A-RES-74-299-fr-parsed | 35. Requests the United Nations system, including the regional commissions, the World Health Organization and other relevant entities of the system, to assist Member States, upon request, in meeting the voluntary global road safety performance targets, as appropriate; | operative |
A-RES-74-299-fr-parsed | 36. Requests the World Health Organization, in its progress reports on world road safety, to continue to monitor efforts to achieve the goals of the Decade of Action and to make use, as appropriate, of existing efforts, including those of regional road safety observatories, to harmonize and make available and comparabl... | operative |
A-RES-74-299-fr-parsed | 37. Invites all relevant stakeholders, international organizations, development banks and donors, foundations, professional associations and private sector enterprises to increase funding for the implementation of the necessary measures to achieve voluntary global performance targets; | operative |
A-RES-74-299-fr-parsed | 38. Invites Member States to increase investment in road safety at all levels, including by allocating adequate budget allocations for the improvement of related institutions and infrastructure, as well as by supporting the United Nations Road Safety Fund and other mechanisms, such as the Global Road Safety Mechanism e... | operative |
A-RES-74-299-fr-parsed | 39. Decides to convene a high-level meeting, no later than the end of 2022, on improving global road safety, to address gaps and challenges, as well as to mobilize political leaders and promote multisectoral and multi-stakeholder collaboration in this regard, and further decides to define the scope and modalities of th... | operative |
A-RES-74-299-fr-parsed | 40. Also decides to include in the provisional agenda of its sixty-sixth session the item entitled "Improving global road safety" and requests the Secretary-General to report to the General Assembly at that session on the progress made in achieving the objectives of the Second Decade of Action. | operative |
A-RES-74-3-fr-parsed | 2. We reaffirm that the Samoa Guidelines constitute an autonomous and comprehensive framework setting priorities for the sustainable development of small island developing States, based on the Programme of Action for the Sustainable Development of Small Island Developing States 2 and the Mauritius Strategy for the Furt... | operative |
A-RES-74-3-fr-parsed | 3. We welcome the commitment and leadership shown by small island developing States, as well as their considerable efforts, with the assistance of the international community, to advance the implementation of the Samoa Pathways, and we welcome the progress already made. | operative |
A-RES-74-3-fr-parsed | 4. We reaffirm that small island developing States remain a unique case in the area of sustainable development and reiterate our solidarity with them, as they continue to face the challenges posed in particular by their geographical remoteness, small-scale economies, high costs and negative impacts of climate change an... | operative |
A-RES-74-3-fr-parsed | 5. We know that, for all countries, the principle of national ownership is an essential aspect of our common quest for sustainable development, and we reaffirm our commitment to the implementation of the 2030 Agenda and the Addis Ababa Programme of Action, otherwise we will not be able to achieve sustainable developmen... | operative |
A-RES-74-3-fr-parsed | 7. We remain particularly concerned, given the particular vulnerability of small island developing States, about the devastating effects of climate change, such as extreme weather events and slow onset events, as well as the increasing frequency, magnitude and intensity of disasters. | operative |
A-RES-74-3-fr-parsed | 8. We stress the synergies between the implementation of the 2030 Agenda and the Paris Agreement, and note with concern the scientific conclusions contained in the special report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change entitled Global Warming of 1.5 °C. | operative |
A-RES-74-3-fr-parsed | 11. We recognize the value of partnerships in promoting the sustainable development of small island developing States and note the establishment of the Small Island Developing States Partnership Framework, and reaffirm our commitment to working with small island developing States through constructive partnerships. | operative |
A-RES-74-3-fr-parsed | 12. We note the importance of oceans, seas and marine resources for small island developing States and recognize their efforts to develop and implement strategies for the conservation and sustainable use of oceans and their resources, reiterate the call in the declaration entitled "The ocean: our future: call for actio... | operative |
A-RES-74-3-fr-parsed | 13. We stress the importance of the negotiations for the elaboration of a legally binding international instrument to the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea on the conservation and sustainable use of marine biodiversity in areas outside national jurisdiction, in accordance with resolution 72/249 of 24 Dece... | operative |
A-RES-74-3-fr-parsed | 14. We stress the importance of eradicating poverty in all its forms and dimensions, including extreme poverty, and the eradication of poverty is the greatest challenge facing humanity and is an indispensable prerequisite for sustainable development, as well as a major goal of the 2030 Agenda for Small Island States an... | operative |
A-RES-74-3-fr-parsed | 15. We recognize that gender equality and the advancement of women and the full realization of the human rights of women and girls have a transformative and multiplier effect on sustainable development and are drivers of economic growth in small island developing States. Women can be a powerful driver of change. | operative |
A-RES-74-3-fr-parsed | 16. We note the progress made in social inclusion by many small island developing States, but note with concern that poverty, unemployment, inequality and exclusion continue to disproportionately affect people in vulnerable situations. | operative |
A-RES-74-3-fr-parsed | 18. We recognize the need to prevent, detect and treat communicable and non-communicable diseases, and we note with concern that these diseases and the health consequences of disasters undermine the delivery of accessible and quality health care in small island developing States. | operative |
A-RES-74-3-fr-parsed | 19. We recognize that, as their incomes increase, small island developing States face significant challenges in securing adequate and affordable financing for sustainable development, including concessional financing, and in developing methods to better address the complex and diverse realities of middle-income countri... | operative |
A-RES-74-3-fr-parsed | 20. We remain committed to assisting small island developing States to continue to consider innovative financial instruments and mechanisms such as debt swaps for development programmes, debt swaps for climate change adaptation programmes and blue and green bonds, recognizing the need to reduce the debt burden in order... | operative |
A-RES-74-3-fr-parsed | 21. We reaffirm that successful participation in international trade is one of the main drivers of sustainable economic growth and development, and we note with concern that small island developing States continue to experience difficulties in participating in the multilateral trading system. | operative |
A-RES-74-3-fr-parsed | 22. We recognize that remittances are one of the main sources of external financing in many small island developing States, and we note with concern that remittances continue to face significant barriers to remittances and access, including costs, rules and limited access to correspondent banking services. | operative |
A-RES-74-3-fr-parsed | 23. We note with concern the transitional problems faced by small island developing States that have recently graduated from or are about to graduate from the least developed countries, and we remain aware that graduation from this category should not slow the progress made by a country in the area of development, and ... | operative |
A-RES-74-3-fr-parsed | 24. We emphasize the importance of access to reliable, sustainable and modern energy services at affordable prices for small island developing States, and we welcome all initiatives, such as the International Renewable Energy Agency and the Small Island Developing States Sustainable Energy Initiative, aimed at assistin... | operative |
A-RES-74-3-fr-parsed | 25. We welcome the efforts of small island developing States to improve the connectivity of their means of transport, and recognize that sustainable transport plays an important role in promoting synergies among policies, trade facilitation, infrastructure connectivity, financial cooperation and exchanges among peoples... | operative |
A-RES-74-3-fr-parsed | 26. We recognize the importance of disaster risk reduction in promoting sustainable development in all its dimensions as well as resilient societies, and note that many small island developing States continue to suffer the severe impact of disasters, including significant loss of life, destruction of biodiversity and i... | operative |
A-RES-74-3-fr-parsed | 27. We also recognize that in response to the adverse effects of climate change, a variety of approaches, such as ecosystem approaches, are being implemented for small island developing States as part of comprehensive adaptation, disaster risk reduction and resilience strategies. | operative |
A-RES-74-3-fr-parsed | 28. We reiterate the need to improve the collection and statistical analysis of data, including high-quality data and disaggregated data, to enable small island developing States to better plan, monitor and evaluate the implementation of the Samoa Guidelines, the 2030 Agenda and the Sendai Framework monitoring system. | operative |
A-RES-74-3-fr-parsed | 29. We recognize that science, technology and innovation are indispensable drivers and catalysts for sustainable development, and in this regard reaffirm our commitment to support the efforts of small island developing States to access appropriate, reliable, affordable, modern and environmentally sound technologies und... | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 2. Welcomes the efforts made in the framework of the New Partnership for Africa's Development 3 , and in this regard those made by development partners to strengthen cooperation with the New Partnership for Africa's Development, and recognizes the progress made, while recognizing that much remains to be done in terms o... | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 3. Notes the importance of contributing to Agenda 2063 and its first ten-year implementation plan (2014-2023), and recognizes the usefulness of the New Partnership for Africa's Development programme, both of which are an integral part of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, 8 and in this regard stresses the nee... | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 4. Stresses that economic development, including inclusive industrial development, and policies aimed at building productive capacities in Africa can generate employment and income for the poor and thus act as a driving force for poverty eradication and the achievement of the internationally agreed development goals, i... | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 5. Expresses its determination to ensure the full implementation of the Political Declaration on Africa's Development Needs, adopted at the high-level meeting on Africa's development needs, held on 22 September 2008; 9 | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 6. Welcomes the progress made by African countries in implementing the commitments made in the New Partnership for Africa's Development on strengthening democracy, respect for human rights, governance and sound economic management, and encourages African countries, with the participation of relevant stakeholders, inclu... | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 7. Encourages African countries to strengthen and develop local and regional infrastructure and to continue to share best practices in order to strengthen regional integration and integration at the continental level, and in this regard welcomes the work of the African Union High-level Subcommittee on the Presidential ... | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 8. Also encourages African countries to maintain the trend towards increased domestic and foreign investment in infrastructure development, including by strengthening the mobilization of national resources from the public and private sectors, and to improve the efficiency of existing investments; | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 9. Recalls the holding of the third meeting of the World Institute for Infrastructure, held in Bali, Indonesia, on 13 October 2018, and recalls in this regard that, as described in the Addis Ababa Programme of Action of the Third International Conference on Financing for Development 10 , the Institute should enable the... | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 10. Recognizes the need for Africa's development partners to align their infrastructure investment efforts to contribute to the Programme for Infrastructure Development in Africa, and recalls the Dakar Programme of Action to Mobilize Investment for Africa's Development | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 11. Encourages African countries to accelerate the achievement of the goal of food security and nutrition in Africa, welcomes the commitment of African leaders to devote at least 10 per cent of public expenditure to agriculture and to ensure its effective and efficient use, and in this regard expresses its support for ... | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 12. Urges continued support for measures taken to address the challenges of eradicating poverty, hunger and malnutrition, creating employment and achieving sustainable development in Africa, including, as appropriate, debt relief, improved market access and support for the private sector and entrepreneurship, as well a... | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 13. Recognizes the need for African development partners to align their efforts with the commitments made in the Declaration on Nutritional Security for Inclusive Economic Growth and Sustainable Development in Africa, to contribute to the Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Programme and to the implementation ... | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 14. Calls for effective measures and targeted investments to strengthen national health systems and ensure access to safe drinking water and sanitation to prevent epidemics, including Ebola and Coronavirus (COVnD-19), encourages development partners to continue to support African countries' efforts to strengthen nation... | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 15. Notes that VOCnD-19 poses an unprecedented threat to the continent's hard-won development and economic gains, welcomes the efforts of African leaders to mitigate the impact of the pandemic on their countries and citizens, expresses its deep appreciation to all partners and international organizations, including the... | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 16. Recalls the adoption of the political declaration of the high-level meeting of the General Assembly on tuberculosis, contained in its resolution 73/3 of 10 October 2018, and the political declaration of the third high-level meeting of the General Assembly on the prevention and control of non-communicable diseases, ... | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 17. Encourages African countries to continue their efforts to invest in education, in particular in mathematics education, vocational training, including engineering, science, technology and innovation, with a view to enhancing added value and promoting sustainable industrial development; | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 18. Recognizes the important role that the African regional economic communities can play in the implementation of the mandate of the New Partnership and the implementation of Agenda 2063 and its first 10-year implementation plan, in close cooperation with the African Union, and in this regard encourages African countr... | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 19. Reaffirms the need to assist developing countries in strengthening the capacity of national statistical offices and data management systems to provide access to high-quality, reliable, up-to-date and disaggregated data; | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 20. Requests the organizations of the United Nations system to continue to assist the New Partnership and African countries in the development of projects and programmes in line with the priorities of the New Partnership, reaffirms the essential role of the Committee of Heads of State and Government for the Guidance of... | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 21. Expresses concern at the increasing challenges posed by the adverse effects of climate change, drought, land degradation, desertification, biodiversity loss and floods, and their impact on the fight against poverty, famine and hunger, which could pose other serious challenges in the achievement of the international... | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 22. Expresses its deep concern at the continuing negative effects of desertification, land degradation and drought on the African continent, stresses the importance of short-, medium- and long-term measures, and in this regard calls for the effective and sustained implementation of the United Nations Convention to Comb... | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 23. Recognizes that Africa, as one of the least contributing regions to climate change, is highly vulnerable and exposed to its adverse effects, invites, in this regard, the international community, in particular the developed countries, to continue to support Africa's indispensable adaptation efforts, including throug... | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 24. Urges Member States that have not yet done so to consider ratifying or acceding to the United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime and the Protocols thereto 15 , the Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs of 1961 as amended by the 1972 Protocol 16 , the Convention on Psychotropic Substances of 1971... | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 25. Stresses the importance of the support provided to Africa by its partners, including developed countries, and the efforts of African countries to better mobilize domestic resources, in particular through capacity-building and international cooperation in combating illicit financial flows and in asset recovery and r... | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 26. Reaffirms the commitment to intensify efforts to significantly reduce illicit financial flows by 2030 with a view to their eventual elimination, including by combating tax fraud and corruption, strengthening national regulation and enhancing international cooperation, in accordance with the Addis Ababa Programme of... | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 27. Recalls the Second International Meeting of Experts on the Return of Stolen Assets, held in Addis Ababa from 7 to 9 May 2019, and recommends further efforts to strengthen the recovery and return of stolen assets and to identify good practices for the return of stolen assets in support of sustainable development; | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 28. Reaffirms that gender equality, the advancement of all women and girls and the full enjoyment of their human rights are essential factors for achieving sustainable, inclusive and equitable economic growth and development, reaffirms also the need to mainstream gender issues, including through targeted measures and i... | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 29. Welcomes the significant progress made in the implementation of the African Peer Review Mechanism, in particular the voluntary accession of 40 African countries to the Mechanism and the completion of the evaluation in 21 countries, as well as the progress made in the implementation of the national action programmes... | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 30. Stresses that the African Peer Review Mechanism belongs to African countries, and calls upon the international community to assist those countries that so request in implementing their national programmes of action developed under the Mechanism; | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 31. Notes with concern that preliminary data indicate a 4 per cent decrease in the net amount of bilateral aid to Africa in 2018, compared to 2017 20 , and notes that there are no comparable updated data on the amount of bilateral aid to Africa in 2019; | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 32. Reaffirms that the implementation of all official development assistance commitments remains paramount, including the commitment of many developed countries to allocate 0.7 per cent of their gross national income to official development assistance and 0.15 to 0.20 per cent to least developed countries, welcomes the... | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 33. Notes with satisfaction the ambition expressed in Agenda 2063 of the African Union to lift broad sections of the population out of poverty, to improve incomes and to drive economic and social transformation, and considers it important that the international community assist African countries in achieving these ambi... | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 34. Recognizes that innovative financing mechanisms can help developing countries that decide to use them to mobilize additional resources for their development and that these mechanisms should complement, rather than replace, traditional forms of financing and, while acknowledging the considerable progress that has be... | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 35. Notes with concern the abnormally low share of Africa in international trade, which amounted to approximately 2.45 per cent and 2.96 per cent of world merchandise exports and imports, respectively, in 2019; | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 36. Expresses concern at the increasing debt burden of some African countries, and stresses the importance of debt crisis prevention and prudent debt management, calls for the resolution once and for all of the external debt problems of African countries, including the problem of undeclared or hidden debt, and consider... | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 37. Welcomes the collaboration between the African Private Sector Forum and the United Nations Global Compact, and requests that this partnership be strengthened, in consultation with the African Union Commission, to support private sector development in Africa and the achievement of sustainable development goals, in a... | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 38. Encourages developing countries and countries with economies in transition to continue their efforts to create favourable conditions at the national level that facilitate entrepreneurship and the transformation of the informal sector into a formal sector in Africa and attract investment, including through the estab... | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 39. Notes that foreign direct investment is one of the main sources of financing for development, that it plays a crucial role in promoting inclusive economic growth and sustainable development, including by facilitating job creation and the eradication of poverty and hunger, and that it assists African countries to pa... | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 40. Invites all African development partners, in particular developed countries, to support the efforts of African countries to promote and maintain macroeconomic stability, to assist African countries in attracting investment and promoting policies that contribute to promoting domestic and foreign investment, for exam... | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 42. Reaffirms the need for all countries and multilateral institutions concerned to continue their efforts to achieve greater coherence in their trade policies vis-à-vis African countries, and recognizes the importance of efforts to integrate those countries fully into the multilateral trading system and to empower the... | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 43. Also reaffirms our determination to move together towards sustainable development and to work collectively towards truly global development and "win-win" cooperation from which all countries and regions of the world can reap considerable benefits; | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 44. Stresses the importance of facilitating the accession of developing countries to the World Trade Organization, recognizing that this would help them to integrate fully and expeditiously into the multilateral trading system, calls in this regard for the acceleration of the accession process of developing countries w... | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 45. Welcomes the various important initiatives undertaken by African countries and their development partners, as well as other initiatives, stresses the importance of coordinating these initiatives in favour of Africa and the need to translate them into action, and in this regard recognizes that North-South and South-... | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 46. Welcomes the steps taken by the United Nations and the African Union to align the clusters of the Regional Coordination Mechanism for Africa with the strategic frameworks of the African Union and the New Partnership for Africa's Development (NEPAD) for 2014-2017 and Agenda 2063, and invites development partners, in... | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 47. Requests the Secretary-General to encourage greater coherence in the work of the United Nations system in support of the New Partnership for Africa's Development to accelerate the implementation of Agenda 2063, according to the agreed clusters of the Regional Coordination Mechanism for Africa, and in this regard ca... | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 48. Recalls the establishment of the United Nations mechanism to follow up on commitments made to Africa's development, and invites Member States and all relevant entities of the United Nations system, including funds, programmes, specialized agencies and regional commissions, in particular the Economic Commission for ... | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 49. Stresses the crucial importance of partnership in achieving the sustainable development goals, calls for coordinated action and the sharing of experience in order to accelerate the implementation of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, and in this regard welcomes the holding of the sixth session of the Afri... | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 50. Reaffirms its determination to further strengthen public policies and the mobilization and efficient use of domestic resources, bearing in mind that such resources are primarily generated by economic growth, through an enabling environment at all levels; | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 52. Notes with satisfaction that the NEPAD Agency has become the African Union Development Agency, with a specific mandate to provide technical support for the implementation of Agenda 2063 in synergy with the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development; | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 53. Welcomes the intensification of efforts to improve the quality of official development assistance and to increase its development impact, welcomes the Development Cooperation Forum of the Economic and Social Council, takes note of other initiatives such as the high-level forums on aid effectiveness, resulting, inte... | operative |
A-RES-74-301-fr-parsed | 54. Requests the Secretary-General to submit to the General Assembly annually a comprehensive and concrete report on the implementation of the present resolution, based on inputs received from Governments, the United Nations system and other parties concerned with the New Partnership, and to submit an addendum to the A... | operative |
A-RES-74-302-fr-parsed | 1. Takes note of the report of the Secretary-General on the implementation of the recommendations contained in his report on the causes of conflict and the promotion of durable peace and sustainable development in Africa; 9 | operative |
A-RES-74-302-fr-parsed | 2. Recalls the adoption of Agenda 2063 of the African Union and its first ten-year implementation plan (2014-2023), which identifies the main flagship projects, accelerated programmes, priority areas and objectives, as well as African strategies and policies at all levels, and recognizes the importance of supporting th... | operative |
A-RES-74-302-fr-parsed | 4. Also welcomes the progress made by several African countries, the African Union and subregional organizations in the areas of conflict prevention, peacemaking, peacekeeping and peacebuilding, and development, calls upon Governments, the African Union, subregional organizations, the United Nations system and other re... | operative |
A-RES-74-302-fr-parsed | 5. Stresses the importance of creating an enabling environment for national reconciliation, transitional justice and social and economic recovery in countries emerging from conflict, and calls upon the United Nations system, the international community and all partners to support the efforts of African countries to pro... | operative |
A-RES-74-302-fr-parsed | 6. Recognizes that international and regional efforts to prevent conflict and consolidate peace in Africa should be directed towards the sustainable development of the continent and the development of the human and institutional capacities of African nations and organizations, in particular in the priority areas identi... | operative |
A-RES-74-302-fr-parsed | 7. Calls upon African Governments to strengthen structures and policies designed to create an enabling environment to foster inclusive and sustainable economic growth and attract foreign direct investment, and invites the international community to facilitate this endeavour by providing adequate financial and technical... | operative |
A-RES-74-302-fr-parsed | 8. Calls upon the international community to increase its support and to fulfil its commitments to take further action in the areas essential for the economic and social development of Africa, in a spirit of mutually beneficial cooperation, and to build a shared future based on humanity that we share, and welcomes the ... | operative |
A-RES-74-302-fr-parsed | 9. Recognizes the need for African countries to create an enabling environment for inclusive growth for sustainable development and for the international community to continue its efforts to increase the flow of new and additional resources from all sources, public and private, domestic and foreign, to finance their de... | operative |
A-RES-74-302-fr-parsed | 10. Urges continued support for measures taken to address the challenges of poverty eradication, combating hunger, creating decent jobs and achieving sustainable development in Africa, including, as appropriate, debt relief, improved market access, regional integration and intra-African trade, including through the Afr... | operative |
A-RES-74-302-fr-parsed | 12. Stresses the importance of strategic partnerships between the United Nations, the African Union and the regional economic communities in, inter alia, promoting an integrated and coherent implementation of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development 5 and Agenda 2063 of the African Union; | operative |
A-RES-74-302-fr-parsed | 13. Recognizes the adverse impact of climate change and natural disasters, inter alia, on the sustainable development of African Member States, including drought, desertification, loss of biodiversity, land degradation, floods and food insecurity, and stresses the importance of appropriate risk assessment and risk mana... | operative |
A-RES-74-302-fr-parsed | 14. Stresses the need to address the economic, social and environmental consequences of climate change, desertification and land degradation in Africa, and stresses the importance of supporting efforts to improve the implementation of resilience-building initiatives in Africa, in particular the Comprehensive Africa Agr... | operative |
A-RES-74-302-fr-parsed | 16. Recalls the African Union Convention on the Protection of and Assistance to Internally Displaced Persons in Africa, which entered into force on 6 December 2012, and the Kampala Declaration on Refugees, Returnees and Displaced Persons in Africa, adopted on 23 October 2009; | operative |
A-RES-74-302-fr-parsed | 17. Reaffirms the need to promote and protect effectively the human rights and fundamental freedoms of all migrants, in particular women and children, regardless of their migration status, and to address the issue of international migration through international, regional or bilateral cooperation and dialogue and a com... | operative |
A-RES-74-302-fr-parsed | 18. Calls for the promotion of the principle of the protection of refugees in Africa and for addressing the plight of refugees, including by supporting efforts to eliminate the causes of refugee displacement and to facilitate the voluntary and sustainable return and reintegration of refugees in safety and dignity, and ... | operative |
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