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A-RES-76-258-fr-parsed
We note with concern that the current supply of climate finance for adaptation remains insufficient to respond to the worsening effects of climate change in developing country Parties and recognize the importance of adequate and predictable climate finance; we welcome the fact that Parties 11 have urged developed count...
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221. We note that in order to limit global warming to 1.5°C, global greenhouse gas emissions must be reduced rapidly, drastically and sustainably, including by reducing carbon dioxide emissions by 45 per cent from 2010 levels by 2030 and by reducing them to a zero net level by the middle of the century, while significa...
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222. We welcome the fact that parties 12 have urged developed country Parties to fully implement the $100 billion target without delay and until 2025, and stress the importance of transparency in the implementation of their commitments, and we welcome the fact that they have urged the functional entities of the Financi...
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223. We recall that, as stated in Article 9.4 of the Paris Agreement, the allocation of increased financial resources should aim to make possible a balance between adaptation and mitigation, taking into account country-led strategies, as well as the priorities and needs of developing country Parties, in particular thos...
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224. We welcome the fact that Parties 13 have urged developed countries among themselves to double, at least, their collective contribution to climate adaptation financing for developing country Parties in relation to 2019 levels by 2025, with a view to achieving a balanced use of these significantly increased resource...
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225. We are pleased that the Council for the Green Climate Fund has advocated a perfect balance between mitigation and adaptation, measured in equivalent terms, and has set itself the objective of continuing to allocate at least 50 per cent of adaptation funds to particularly vulnerable countries, in particular the lea...
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226. We commit ourselves to increasing the efficiency and effectiveness of the financing of multilateral climate-related funds — the Green Climate Fund, the Global Environment Facility, the Least Developed Countries Fund, the Special Climate Change Fund and other climate-related funds — and to continue to facilitate th...
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227. We will continue to support the development of adaptation approaches in least developed countries, based on nature and ecosystem solutions, and adaptation in cities, where the most affected people reside disproportionately, such as youth, children, persons with disabilities, indigenous peoples and local communitie...
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228. We will continue to encourage regional cooperation and support for the benefit of the least developed countries in addressing the consequences of cross-border regional climate risks that primarily affect supply and value chains.
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229. We call upon relevant entities of the United Nations system, international financial institutions and development banks, as well as the private sector and foundations, to continue to assist the least developed countries in formulating and implementing national adaptation plans and strategies, and
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230. We will continue to invest in risk prevention and reduction, taking into account the gender perspective and focusing on infrastructure and public services based on risk analysis and resilient, and to take action to adopt laws, policies and standards of a regulatory nature, but also to encourage investors and compa...
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231. We are committed to providing strong support to existing climate and disaster risk management financing and insurance mechanisms, disaster-driven financial instruments, such as the Caribbean Natural Disaster Insurance Scheme, the Pan-African Mutual Risk Management and the Pacific Disaster Risk Insurance Company, a...
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232. We commit ourselves to provide financial and technical assistance and to facilitate the transfer of technology on mutually agreed terms for the benefit of the least developed countries for the development and implementation of national strategies for the sustainable use, conservation, protection and rehabilitation...
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233. We call on the private sector, including banks and institutional investors, to mobilize to make progress in addressing environmental, social and corporate governance issues, and to take climate change and biodiversity into account when making decisions on their investments in the least developed countries.
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234. We recognize that the least developed countries rely heavily on public resources to finance sustainable development needs and to live smoothly the transition to reclassification, and that available resources - domestic and external, public and private - are not sufficient to meet the growing investment needs and b...
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235. We welcome the progress made over the past decade in reclassification and stress that continued support and incentives will be required to increase the number of least developed countries to meet the required graduation thresholds and to ensure that reclassification is rapidly sustainable and irreversible. Our goa...
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We know that the weak tax-to-GDP ratio of the least developed countries is due in part to the economic structure of the least developed countries, their high poverty rate, the shortcomings of their tax administration and the nature of their tax system. Their tax-to-GDP ratio has increased very slowly from 13.3 in 2011 ...
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239. We call upon the least developed countries to make significant efforts to effectively mobilize domestic resources, strengthen infrastructure and financial capacity, and establish appropriate regulatory mechanisms and institutions; to continue to take measures to attract and retain investment and mobilize domestic ...
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241. We commit ourselves to strengthening international tax cooperation and to joining efforts to bridge the remaining gaps in tax systems, all of which are aimed at avoiding tax base erosion and profit transfer, and we welcome the support provided by initiatives such as the Borderless Tax Inspectors and the Addis Abab...
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242. We reiterate our commitment to strengthen the capacity of tax administrations and to broaden the tax base, as well as to support voluntary compliance with the rules and principles of accountability and transparency and the effective management of tax revenues and risks, including through the digitization and trans...
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243. We advocate the use of innovative instruments such as mobile banking, payment platforms and digital payment, as appropriate, and improved access to such instruments, including those of women and micro-enterprises, and we measure the importance that this can have in promoting financial inclusion and in reducing cos...
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245. We commit ourselves to significantly reducing illicit financial flows in order to assist the least developed countries in mobilizing resources, including through increased international cooperation, to curb corruption and money-laundering and to trace, freeze and recover stolen assets and return them to the countr...
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246. We call upon all countries and institutions concerned to take steps to improve financial reporting practices and to promote transparency in financial reporting, both in countries of origin and in countries of destination, and to cooperate in efforts to curb illicit financial flows and corruption.
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248. We recall that North-South cooperation, South-South cooperation and triangular cooperation are vital for the least developed countries, stressing that South-South cooperation and the commitments made by the countries of the South cannot replace North-South cooperation, but complement, in particular, technical assi...
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249. We recognize the growing importance of impact-based investment as a new source of public-private financing for the 2030 Agenda and stress the urgent need to find ways to direct public and private investment towards achieving the 2030 Agenda goals.
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We are committed to ensuring compliance with all ODA commitments made to least developed countries, to ensuring that aid is in line with their national priorities and to working towards greater agreement with their domestic systems and procedures, and we welcome the European Union's decision to reaffirm its collective ...
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251. We call on development partners to ensure that the specific handicaps and structural constraints of least developed countries are taken into account in the distribution of global ODA resources, and we call on those partners to ensure that the appropriate balance is struck in the distribution of aid, so as to promo...
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We will hold open, inclusive and transparent discussions on the modernization of official development assistance measurement methods and on the proposed use of the concept of "total public support for sustainable development", and we affirm that no such measurement method should result in a dilution of commitments alre...
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We note with concern that foreign direct investment (FDI) flows to the least developed countries, which had already declined since 2015, have fallen to $21 billion, or 1.4 per cent of global FDI, in 2019. In these countries, VOCID-19 has accelerated the decline in FDI, which remains heavily concentrated on extractive i...
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We commit ourselves to implementing the decision contained in the Addis Ababa Programme of Action to adopt and implement mechanisms to encourage investment in least developed countries; we reiterate decision 16 to provide financial and technical assistance for project preparation and contract negotiations, advisory sup...
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263. We note with concern that the debt stock of the least developed countries and their debt-servicing obligations have increased significantly over the past decade. The total amount of debt-servicing payments for the least developed countries has increased from an average of 5 per cent of exports of goods and service...
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264. We commit ourselves to assisting the least developed countries in ensuring the long-term sustainability of their debt and to adopting concerted policies aimed at promoting adequate debt financing, debt relief, where appropriate, debt restructuring and sound management, as appropriate; we also commit ourselves to e...
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265. We invite the IMF to undertake an in-depth review of the external debt of the least developed countries, the effects of the VOCID-19 pandemic on the debt-servicing capacity of those countries and the options for action to be considered at the national and international levels to effectively address their external ...
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266. We commit to continue our efforts to provide increased support, including financial and technical support, to the least developed countries in order to help them build the institutional capacity needed to better integrate the management of sustainable, upstream and downstream debt into national development strateg...
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We invite creditors and debtors to further explore, as appropriate and mutually agreed upon, the use of debt instruments, such as debt conversion initiatives, for sustainable development and climate action on a case-by-case basis.
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269. We note that remittances to least developed countries have increased significantly over the past decade, but declined in 2020 due to VOCID-19. Over the same period, the costs of remittances have remained disproportionately high.
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We commit ourselves to working to improve access to, and use and quality of, financial services in order to reduce the cost of remittances to the least developed countries, and we welcome international efforts, such as the Global Forum on Money Transfers and Development, led by the International Fund for Agricultural D...
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271. We undertake to provide accessible information on the costs of remittances, including exchange rates, depending on the different providers and channels, for example through online comparators, in order to improve transparency and competition in the relevant market and to enable migrants and their families, through...
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272. We agree to support incentive programmes to ensure that remittances are used for long-term investment in productive capacity-building in least developed countries, such as micro-enterprises and small and medium-sized enterprises, and that women and men are treated equally, whether as partners or beneficiaries, and...
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273. We note with satisfaction that 4 countries have been reclassified since 2011, 4 more will be reclassified by 2024 and 12 have met the reclassification requirements at least once. However, we note with concern that most countries graduating from the least developed country category face a multitude of difficulties,
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274. We also note that the Committee for Development Policy has considered that a five-year preparatory period would be necessary for the three countries recommended for graduation in the triennial review of 2021 to be able to effectively prepare for a smooth transition, as they should prepare for their graduation whil...
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275. We call upon the Committee for Development Policy to continue to engage with the reclassification countries and newly reclassified countries in order to understand the full scope of the socio-economic effects of VOCID-19, as a continuation of the work of the Committee on Sustainable Development and for post-pandem...
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276. We aim to ensure that the least developed countries that have been reclassified or are in the process of being reclassified have an incentive structure of international support, including support for a smooth transition by development partners and trading partners, as well as the United Nations system, so that the...
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We stress that the key to success in graduating from the least developed country category is the adoption of a strategy for a smooth transition by each reclassification country; we urge development partners and trading partners, as well as the United Nations system, to continue to support the implementation of smooth t...
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279. We invite the least developed countries and development partners to integrate smooth reclassification and transition tactics into their national development strategies and assistance strategies, as appropriate, including capacity-building and technical assistance activities aimed at diversifying funding sources, i...
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280. We agree that reclassification countries face significant challenges in addressing the economic and social consequences of the VOCID-19 pandemic and disasters, and we encourage the inclusion of disaster risk reduction in smooth transition strategies, including in the impact assessment of the likely consequences of...
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281. We recognize the need to strengthen support to countries before and after graduation through appropriate, predictable, additional and demand-driven incentives and support, in particular in the following areas: (a) Technical assistance in the preparation and implementation of a smooth transition strategy, including...
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282. We welcome the work of the inter-agency task force on reclassification, led by the Office of the High Representative for the Least Developed Countries, Landlocked Developing Countries and Small Island Developing States, to provide strengthened and coordinated United Nations system-wide support to countries graduat...
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283. We welcome the establishment by the Office of the High Representative for the Least Developed Countries, Landlocked Developing Countries and Small Island Developing States, which chairs the inter-agency task force on reclassification, and by the Department of Economic and Social Affairs, as the secretariat of the ...
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284. We call for the establishment of a crisis-reactive follow-up mechanism to better correlate with the specific support needed, including the possible extension of the preparatory period. The strengthened follow-up by the Committee for Development Policy should include the following: (a) Establishment of a response p...
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285. We call upon the Committee for Development Policy to continue the necessary consultations with the least developed countries and those that have recently graduated from this category, while conducting the triennial review of the list of least developed countries and the follow-up to those countries that are in the...
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We note with concern that many least developed countries lack high-quality data to measure and monitor progress on the goals and objectives of the Istanbul Programme of Action and the sustainable development goals. Although the average indicator of statistical capacity in 2019 has increased from 56.4 in 2011 to 58.0 in...
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We commit ourselves to further strengthening traditional data sources, such as surveys and administrative registers, complemented by new sources, and to continue to intensify efforts to collect, analyse and disseminate quality, accessible, up-to-date and reliable data in order to improve monitoring and policy developme...
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The existence of effective and appropriate monitoring and control mechanisms at the national, subregional, regional and global levels is essential for the successful implementation of the Doha Programme of Action and is fully in line with existing frameworks, such as the sustainable development goals; national, regiona...
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291. We call upon the entities of the United Nations development system to actively support the implementation of the Doha Programme of Action at the national, subregional, regional and global levels, in close cooperation and partnership with the World Bank Group and international financial and development institutions...
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292. We invite resident coordinators and United Nations country teams, as well as national representatives of the World Bank Group, IMF and other multilateral institutions, to continue to collaborate and support national monitoring and monitoring activities.
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296. We invite the General Assembly and the Economic and Social Council, as well as the High-level Political Forum on Sustainable Development, to devote the necessary time to addressing the challenges of sustainable development for the least developed countries in order to increase the participation of those States and...
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297. The Economic and Social Council is invited to continue to include in the agenda of its annual substantive session, on a regular basis, an item on the review and coordination of the implementation of the Doha Programme of Action; the Council should undertake periodic reviews of the progress made and constraints fac...
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299. We invite the governing bodies of the United Nations funds and programmes and other multilateral organizations, including the World Bank Group, the International Monetary Fund and other international financial institutions and the World Trade Organization, to contribute to the implementation of the Doha Programme ...
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300. We request the Secretary-General to ensure the full mobilization and coordination of all components of the United Nations system in order to facilitate concerted implementation and ensure coherent monitoring and follow-up of the Doha Programme of Action at the national, subregional, regional and global levels. Exi...
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301. We welcome the work of the Inter-Agency Advisory Group on the Least Developed Countries, led by the Office of the High Representative for the Least Developed Countries, Landlocked Developing Countries and Small Island Developing States, invite the Chief Executives Board and the High-level Committee on Programmes t...
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302. We invite the Office of the High Representative for the Least Developed Countries, Landlocked Developing Countries and Small Island Developing States to develop a comprehensive road map for the accelerated implementation of the Doha Programme of Action, in which the functions and responsibilities of each of the ac...
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303. The Office of the High Representative for the Least Developed Countries, Landlocked Developing Countries and Small Island Developing States should strengthen its functions in order to: (a) To assist the Secretary-General in the systematic and effective follow-up to and monitoring of the implementation of the Doha ...
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304. The Office of the High Representative for the Least Developed Countries, Landlocked Developing Countries and Small Island Developing States will continue to be responsible for providing coordinated substantive support for the global review of the Doha Programme of Action, including: (a) Monitoring actions taken at...
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305. The Office of the High Representative for the Least Developed Countries, Landlocked Developing Countries and Small Island Developing States will continue to monitor international policy developments of interest to the least developed countries, including the outcomes of major global conferences, and to undertake a...
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309. The General Assembly is invited to consider conducting a comprehensive high-level mid-term review of the implementation of the Doha Programme of Action in 2026, and is invited to consider convening towards the end of the decade, in accordance with the
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4. Notes with appreciation the continued efforts of the Unit to implement its mandate effectively and efficiently, and encourages it to continue its efforts to strengthen the accountability, oversight and governance of the United Nations system;
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7. Welcomes the coordination of the activities of the Unit, the Board of Auditors and the Office of Internal Oversight Services of the Secretariat, and encourages those bodies to continue to share their experiences, knowledge, best practices and lessons learned with other United Nations audit and oversight bodies, as w...
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8. Invites the legislative organs of the participating organizations to make good use of the reports of the Unit and to pay due attention to its recommendations without delay, in accordance with article 11, paragraph 4, of the statute of the Unit, and requests the Secretary-General, in his capacity as Chairman of the U...
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10. Welcomes the implementation of the strategic framework of the Joint Inspection Unit for the period 2020-2029, stresses the need for continuous updating and improvement of the strategic framework, taking into account the momentum and challenges, including those related to the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) and ongo...
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11. Notes with appreciation the performance plan for monitoring and evaluating the implementation of the strategic framework, as well as the intention of the Unit to conduct a comprehensive mid-term evaluation in 2024, and
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12. Also notes with appreciation the efforts of the Unit to improve the quality of its reports, including their readability and timeliness, and encourages the Unit to regularly seek the views of participating organizations on the quality and usefulness of its outputs and to use them to improve the effectiveness of its ...
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13. Requests the Unit to continue to provide the Secretariat with its reports in a timely manner so that they can be translated into all official languages of the United Nations long enough before the meetings of the legislative bodies of the participating organizations so that they can discuss them in depth and effect...
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A-RES-76-266-fr-parsed
2. We reaffirm the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration, also known as the Marrakesh Pact on Migration, and recall General Assembly resolution 73/195 of 19 December 2018, in which it endorsed the Global Compact, as well as General Assembly resolution 73/326 of 19 July 2019 on the form and organization...
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3. We also reaffirm that the Global Compact is based on a cross-cutting and interdependent set of guiding principles, namely: priority to the human dimension, international cooperation, national sovereignty, the rule of law and due process, sustainable development, human rights, gender mainstreaming, child-sensitivenes...
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4. We are committed to achieving the goals and commitments of the Global Compact, in accordance with its 360-degree strategy, guiding principles and comprehensive approach, facilitating safe, orderly and regular migration, highlighting the contributions of migrants, regardless of their skill levels, to sustainable deve...
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5. We recognize our common responsibilities towards each other as States Members of the United Nations to respect the migration needs and concerns of all and recognize that all migrants, regardless of their migration status, have human rights, and we reaffirm the need to protect their security and dignity and the prima...
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6. We reaffirm the importance of international cooperation in facilitating safe, orderly and regular migration, including through the implementation of planned and well-managed migration policies in accordance with international law.
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7. We recognize the positive role and contributions of migrants to inclusive growth and sustainable development in countries of origin, transit and destination, which, inter alia, enrich societies through their human, socio-economic and cultural capacities.
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8. We welcome the positive role and contributions of millions of migrants in responding to and recovering from the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19), including as essential workers, and remain deeply concerned that the pandemic has had serious and disproportionate effects on migrants, such as increased exposure to VOCID-...
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9. We recognize that as many as 281 million people worldwide were international migrants in 2020, of whom 48 per cent were women and girls and 15 per cent were under the age of 20, and that remittances are an essential source of support for families and communities, as migrants transferred more than $751 billion in 202...
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10. We recognize the value and dignity of the work of all migrant workers in all sectors, stressing the importance of promoting equitable working conditions and decent work and of ensuring respect for international labour standards, and in this regard also recognize the contribution of migrant workers, including in the...
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11. We are concerned that an increasing number of migrant children, including those who are unaccompanied or separated from their parents or primary caregivers, are particularly vulnerable throughout their migration journey and reaffirm our commitment to protect the rights of the child and to uphold the principle of th...
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12. We are concerned about the impact of financial and economic crises, poverty, health emergencies and food insecurity on international migration and migrants, as well as sudden and larval natural disasters, the adverse effects of climate change and environmental degradation, such as desertification, land degradation,...
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13. We recognize the importance of creating favourable political, economic, social and environmental conditions for people to lead a peaceful, productive and sustainable life in their own country and fully realize their personal aspirations, and in this regard demonstrate our deep solidarity and support for migrants ca...
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14. We reaffirm our collective responsibility to preserve the lives of all migrants and to take measures to prevent loss of life and, in this context, remain deeply concerned that thousands of migrants continue to die or disappear each year through perilous routes on land and at sea, in transit and destination countrie...
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15. We condemn manifestations and acts of racism, racial discrimination and xenophobia against migrants and diasporas and related intolerance, as well as the frequent use of negative stereotypes based, inter alia, on religion or belief.
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16. We are concerned about the risks, including to migrants, associated with irregular migration, smuggling of migrants and crimes against them, which continue to pose significant threats to their lives and well-being, and which require concerted international assessment and response.
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17. We note with appreciation the regional reviews of the implementation of the Global Compact and the assessments of progress made at the national level, including, on a voluntary basis, the development and use of national implementation plans and the integration of the Global Compact into national plans and legislati...
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18. We commend the work of the Global Compact champion countries and the Friends of Migration Group, including their initiative to share ideas, lessons learned and promising practices in support of the implementation of the Global Compact, such as the Rabat Declaration adopted at the first ministerial meeting of the Ch...
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19. We note with appreciation the report of the Secretary-General of 27 December 2021 3 on the implementation of the Global Compact and its guidance to guide the deliberations of the Forum, including its policy priorities.
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20. We welcome the work of the United Nations Migration Network in support of the implementation of the Global Compact, including the establishment of the capacity-building mechanism, which includes the Multi-Partner Trust Fund for Migration and the Migration Network Pole.
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21. We recognize the many efforts, progress and good practices that have emerged in the implementation of the Global Compact and in the achievement of our collective goal of promoting safe, orderly and regular migration, as well as in the context of the VOCID-19 response and post-pandemic recovery, by national and loca...
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22. We are concerned that the progress made in facilitating and benefiting from the benefits of safe, orderly and regular migration is slow and uneven in many areas and that the VOCID-19 pandemic has changed several aspects of international migration with a negative impact on progress, has created new situations of vul...
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23. We recall that, in General Assembly resolution 73/326, Member States decided that the 23 goals set out in the Global Compact would be discussed at four round tables during the Forum.
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27. The adverse effects of climate change, environmental degradation and natural disasters are among the causes of migration, influenced by economic, social, political and demographic contexts; efforts to mitigate and adapt to the adverse effects of climate change have been insufficient, including climate finance, as n...
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28. The lack of mutual recognition of the skills and qualifications of migrants limits their potential, the benefits they can derive from their work and their contribution to sustainable development, and makes them vulnerable to exploitation.1 Many migrant workers, especially women, continue to face precarious working ...
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34. The travel restrictions imposed by countries of origin, transit and destination in response to the VOCID-19 pandemic have on many occasions created or exacerbated situations of vulnerability that migrants already face, as well as difficulties related to return and readmission, including insufficient efforts to mana...
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35. The return, readmission and sustainable reintegration in safety and dignity, in full conformity with international human rights law, have proven to be difficult and complex in many cases; the conditions for a more predictable journey have deteriorated during the VOCID-19 pandemic; limited progress has been made in ...
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50. The funding of the multi-partner trust fund for migration has been insufficient to meet the strong demand of Member States and stakeholders to support the implementation of the Global Compact.
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