Final session is being given by UNCTAD official
RESEARCH and ANALYSIS--solid mandate. Conference has reinforced official mandate. Innovative work. Short mandate for UNCTAD. Great. Policy options and independent analysis for developing countries. Significant.
Another area is the...role of trade and development board in conducting policy dialogue...has been retained and reinforced. So UNCTAD will continue with that on the inter-governmental level. Will review some of its flagship documents. Ministerial meeting in Addis Ababa, UNCTAD should have a commission on globalisation; this was a problem for some UNCTAD members...theer will be some discussion on globalisation issues; atr least some compromise.
UNCTAD will have two commissions--one on trade and development and will address any topic that UNCTAD has; second one will be on enterprise development and ?? Multi-yr extract groups. Issues identified by Trade and development board will be taken to the Commissions. Secretariat is still very important.
12.03pm Palestin issue being retained. Slightly problematic yesterday. A rather contentious issue that could have affected outcome. Last few hours, agreed on s.o. that satisfied everyone. UNCTAD continues to support Palestine liberation with technical assistance.
any questions?
12.05pm
YAO GRAHAM: Commissions reduced from Three to two. Commission on enterprise...what are practical implications of having globalisation as standing issue. How will it have a cross-cutting effect on how the Commission does its work? Doesn't strike as a mandate to work, but something to discuss?
RESPONSE: Our view is not the number of commissions that matter; more about what they do. Will feed into general assembly. The proposal by Africa group to have one on globalisation is not because we do not, but there will be continuous work on it. Partly political, partly practical. Every year, we will have to prepare a background document on a specific area of globalisation.
EKB: my questions are answered below:
WORLD INVESTMENT REPORT--continued interaction with private sector. Outcome emphasises UNCTAD working with civil society and private sector
COMMUNICATIONS STRATEGY--there was a paragraph in the document that referred to that.
Jo Butler speaks @ 12.13pm--Irish government provided minimum transportation and living costs. WIll try and get funding in future to go to Geneva. Commend the document. We are very pleased we have an accord. It is a good accord. Everyone will find something missing. Can be built upon the next four years.
In SAO PAOLO(UNCTAD XI), we can say it is Sao Paolo plus. WE will still have hearings once a year in context of trade and devt board; will also ensure civil society is part and parcel...CS needs to be heard, and member states need to be advised on how to be prioritised. Having a hearing once a year whereby civil society comes to Geneva is certainlhy not enough. Need to know that CSOs are an integral part. Ideas and suggestions forward so that work can be realised.
CHALLENGES IN ACCRA: we can congratulate Ghanaian govt to having sacrificed much to pass it over. Constraints to documentation. Let us not have Ghanaian govt to make one million copies, etc. Lots of statements would be avaliable on the Web. Happy to send statements through the mail. We try to take an attitude to constraint and restraint. If you heard speech on Monday and did not get it, probably because we did not have it.
HOTEL ACCOMMODATION; ensuring that all participants had a suitable room was responsibility of host, but we had to be creative by checking homes, apartments, etc. To that end, team came THREE weeks in advance. Happy to answer any questions. 12.19pm.
INTERACTIVITY--everyone wants to be heard. Panellists to a minimum and interactivity to the highest leevl, but when you have so many coming from afar, they want to be heard! For the future, going beyond read statements. The ACCRA Accord does not stop here. It is a work in progress. How we implement mandates in next four years matter.
Look forward to hearing from you in the future.
YAO GRAHAM: we will put together a report about the forum to put on the website. We have compiled a list of participants. Some registered but did not turn up. UNCTAD also haas its own lists. Have had a summary of some events and that will all go up. We can optimise the amount of information. We have a common interest,. That networking part is where we have a responsibility. Just last word on the costs, some brought by UNCTAD, daily amount not enough for costs. Some future work for the UN and their data. Hotels are expensive in Accra.
Let me say here on behalf of the African participants, there is a pattern. Very little African representation. Certainly more than in Sao Paolo. Next meeting in QATAR , challenge. Prices went through the roof in Doha 2001, let alone in 2012, UNCTAD XII. Nothing more to say. Just again to thank you for your forbearance.
Thankyou all very much; have a safe journey back home.
done @ 12.27pm (uneditted)
Ghanaian; ECOWAS Community Citizen; AU Citizen. Development of life in Ghana is meaningless unless linked up with development of Africa!
Showing posts with label ghana can 2008. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ghana can 2008. Show all posts
Friday, April 25, 2008
Monday, February 04, 2008
Video Clip: Game Over! Ghana 2, Nigeria 1!
Yet another video clip recorded straight from TV3. A short clip illustrating the jubilation from the 40,000-packed-to-capacity Ohene Djan stadium after that game which was the stage for an explosive West African duel...
Friday, January 11, 2008
As the Week Draws to a Close in Accra:Back to Work, or Driven to a Happy Distraction

It's great to be Ghanaian,and it's certainly great tobe alive!
After being exposed once again to the plushness of the Central Region (Elmina Beach Resort) last December for an institutional retreat, I am fast realising this place is my home -- and I am loving it.
Contrasted sharply against many of my contemporaries, I have had it quite good. Exactly 26 years ago this month, my parents; my older brother, Samuel, and I would find ourselves in Brussels, Belgium to begin life as expatriates -- on the path of a priviledged life that would begin in an apartment in Woluwe Saint-Lambert -- and end in Belgian suburbia of Overijse-Maleizen, where tragedy would beget us with my maternal grandmother, and the untimely demise of my brother in 1991 after a 14-month coma.
When I was recruited in 2004 by my current employers from Belgium, it was nothing less of a God-send -- all expenses paid and obtaining confirmation for the position on no less than my 27th birthday! The turbulence I experienced following my helping of my former employers to move into the centre of Brussels was no mean feat! "Baptism of fire" comes to mind, big-style!
In all seriousness, I have been blessed--arriving in an election year in August 2004, and still alive to witness another one, which is replete with political activities: NPP has a flag-bearer under Nana Addo Danquah Akufo-Addo; NDC has its ever-eternal Professor John Evans Atta-Mills; and interestingly, CPP elected theirs in December, with Dr.Paa Kwesi Nduom getting the nod to represent the party.
It is certainly going to be an interesting year.
Whilst I reflect over happenings of last year in both private and personal ways, as well as the positive developments going to take place, let me take this opportunity to wish all Ghanaians and fellow readers of this blog a STUPENDOUS New Year!
As you might see from the inset picture, depicting Stanbic Bank's sponsorship of some games associated with Ghana 2008, football is coming home!!!
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