Palau
Thank you Chairman:
Palau wishes to extend to you and the bureau its congratulations on your election . We look
forward to your clear vision and guidance in the days to come as we embark on the serious issue
of sustainable development and how this ideal can be achieved. We know that you have hard
work in front of you and that you will not forget the special challenges which face Palau and
other small island states in achieving sustainable development . And on that note, Palau would
like to associate ourselves with the statement made by Ambassador Hunte of St . Lucia on behalf
of the Alliance of Small Island States .
Mr. Chairman :
The review of implementation in energy usage . industrial development, air pollution, and climate
change is tremendously important to Palau. And so we are prepared to work with the bureau and
other delegations to ensure that this year s Commission on Sustainable Development is as
productive as possible .
That said, Mr. Chairman, Palau cannot begin to discuss its specific obstacles, lessons-learnedand-
best-practices, or future steps towards implementation for these important thematic clusters
without first dealing with a fundamental cross-cutting constraint in our pursuit of sustainable
development : the lack of UN presence on the ground and the complete absence of UNDP
personnel in our nation .
Mr. Chairman:
The Preamble to the United Nations sets forth the ideals this institution is built upon . One of
those ideals is to "employ international machinery for the economic and social advancement of
all people." This is the true heart of what sustainable development is and should be . . . this is the
heart of what the United Nations Development Project was created to do . UNDP is the United
Nations global development network . UNDP was created to build local capacity to help people
build a better life . For Palau this local capacity is what will make our development truly
sustainable .
As we have mentioned before in other forums, no UN representative can be found in Palau to
assist the country in moving forward . The UN flag simply does not fly there . Instead, Palau is
subject to a complex arrangement where regional but remote centers make decisions that fail to
address Palau s needs or improve its national capacity.
Palau recognizes that good intentions underlie the regionalized system currently linking
geographically similar states with available international partnerships . But at the end of the day,
this arrangement serves primarily to facilitate operations for donors and partners, while
marginalizing the intended beneficiaries . Regionalism also disregards a truism . . . not all nations
in a region have the same needs. As a result, Palau faces serious obstacles accessing available
international assistance and tackling its sustainable development issues .
Mr. Chairman,
We need look no further than the Global Environment Facility s success in the North-Pacific to
see the tremendous difference individualized linkages to international assistance makes . The
efforts of Ambassador Capelle of the Marshall Islands, of Ambassador Nakayama of Micronesia,
and of Palau to create on-island grant boards dealing directly with the GEF has resulted in a fast
and effective mechanism breaking new ground in directing sustainable development projects in
each country . Renewable energy, energy efficiency, climate change adaptation, and low GHG
energy technology projects - to name a few - are now underway in the North Pacific . And these
projects are more likely to work and work effectively because the people who designed the
projects and are implementing the projects live in the communities the projects are serving .
Mr. Chairman
Palau is proud to be a responsible member of the international community . Palau is up to date on
its Counterterrorism obligations. Despite its relative lack of resources, Palau has deployed the
only all-female contingent of Peacekeepers and contributes officers to the Regional Assistance
Mission to the Solomon Islands. When natural disasters strike, despite its small size, Palau
responds willingly, voluntarily making significant financial contributions to ease suffering
caused by the Tsunami in Asia and by Hurricane Katrina . When the international community
called upon countries to preserve biodiversity, Palau came forward with the Micronesian
Challenge which will not just meet, but to exceed the 10% target set by the Convention on
Biodiversity.
In his March 7 th speech earlier this year, Secretary General Kofi Annan noted how the mandate
of the United Nations is to provide people working on the ground to improve the lives of those
who need help . The Secretary General noted how the UN staff on the ground is demoralized by
the frustrations of dealing with a bureaucracy that can seem both elusive and remote. These
same things can be said about the feelings we sometimes get in our small islands when
attempting to access or understand the intricacies of United Nations programs . . . which whether
they are in Geneva, New York or a regional center, are still too far away . Combating these
demons and making good on the aspirations set forth in the Charter preamble are but two of the
reasons why assignment of a UNDP person on the ground, not only in Palau but in other small
nations, is the surest way to help us achieve sustainable development .
What Palau is asking for, then, Mr . Chairman, is not simply a bigger basket of provisions to deal
with energy use, industrial development, air pollution, and climate change . Rather Palau seeks a
more basic and necessary first step -- the establishment of a UN presence on the ground to link
itself more effectively and efficiently with international partners . Only by having its own UNDP
office will Palau build sufficient national capacity to effectively implement strategies for truly
sustainable development .
Palau wishes to extend to you and the bureau its congratulations on your election . We look
forward to your clear vision and guidance in the days to come as we embark on the serious issue
of sustainable development and how this ideal can be achieved. We know that you have hard
work in front of you and that you will not forget the special challenges which face Palau and
other small island states in achieving sustainable development . And on that note, Palau would
like to associate ourselves with the statement made by Ambassador Hunte of St . Lucia on behalf
of the Alliance of Small Island States .
Mr. Chairman :
The review of implementation in energy usage . industrial development, air pollution, and climate
change is tremendously important to Palau. And so we are prepared to work with the bureau and
other delegations to ensure that this year s Commission on Sustainable Development is as
productive as possible .
That said, Mr. Chairman, Palau cannot begin to discuss its specific obstacles, lessons-learnedand-
best-practices, or future steps towards implementation for these important thematic clusters
without first dealing with a fundamental cross-cutting constraint in our pursuit of sustainable
development : the lack of UN presence on the ground and the complete absence of UNDP
personnel in our nation .
Mr. Chairman:
The Preamble to the United Nations sets forth the ideals this institution is built upon . One of
those ideals is to "employ international machinery for the economic and social advancement of
all people." This is the true heart of what sustainable development is and should be . . . this is the
heart of what the United Nations Development Project was created to do . UNDP is the United
Nations global development network . UNDP was created to build local capacity to help people
build a better life . For Palau this local capacity is what will make our development truly
sustainable .
As we have mentioned before in other forums, no UN representative can be found in Palau to
assist the country in moving forward . The UN flag simply does not fly there . Instead, Palau is
subject to a complex arrangement where regional but remote centers make decisions that fail to
address Palau s needs or improve its national capacity.
Palau recognizes that good intentions underlie the regionalized system currently linking
geographically similar states with available international partnerships . But at the end of the day,
this arrangement serves primarily to facilitate operations for donors and partners, while
marginalizing the intended beneficiaries . Regionalism also disregards a truism . . . not all nations
in a region have the same needs. As a result, Palau faces serious obstacles accessing available
international assistance and tackling its sustainable development issues .
Mr. Chairman,
We need look no further than the Global Environment Facility s success in the North-Pacific to
see the tremendous difference individualized linkages to international assistance makes . The
efforts of Ambassador Capelle of the Marshall Islands, of Ambassador Nakayama of Micronesia,
and of Palau to create on-island grant boards dealing directly with the GEF has resulted in a fast
and effective mechanism breaking new ground in directing sustainable development projects in
each country . Renewable energy, energy efficiency, climate change adaptation, and low GHG
energy technology projects - to name a few - are now underway in the North Pacific . And these
projects are more likely to work and work effectively because the people who designed the
projects and are implementing the projects live in the communities the projects are serving .
Mr. Chairman
Palau is proud to be a responsible member of the international community . Palau is up to date on
its Counterterrorism obligations. Despite its relative lack of resources, Palau has deployed the
only all-female contingent of Peacekeepers and contributes officers to the Regional Assistance
Mission to the Solomon Islands. When natural disasters strike, despite its small size, Palau
responds willingly, voluntarily making significant financial contributions to ease suffering
caused by the Tsunami in Asia and by Hurricane Katrina . When the international community
called upon countries to preserve biodiversity, Palau came forward with the Micronesian
Challenge which will not just meet, but to exceed the 10% target set by the Convention on
Biodiversity.
In his March 7 th speech earlier this year, Secretary General Kofi Annan noted how the mandate
of the United Nations is to provide people working on the ground to improve the lives of those
who need help . The Secretary General noted how the UN staff on the ground is demoralized by
the frustrations of dealing with a bureaucracy that can seem both elusive and remote. These
same things can be said about the feelings we sometimes get in our small islands when
attempting to access or understand the intricacies of United Nations programs . . . which whether
they are in Geneva, New York or a regional center, are still too far away . Combating these
demons and making good on the aspirations set forth in the Charter preamble are but two of the
reasons why assignment of a UNDP person on the ground, not only in Palau but in other small
nations, is the surest way to help us achieve sustainable development .
What Palau is asking for, then, Mr . Chairman, is not simply a bigger basket of provisions to deal
with energy use, industrial development, air pollution, and climate change . Rather Palau seeks a
more basic and necessary first step -- the establishment of a UN presence on the ground to link
itself more effectively and efficiently with international partners . Only by having its own UNDP
office will Palau build sufficient national capacity to effectively implement strategies for truly
sustainable development .
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