Desertification:
Desertification,
in the words of UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, is one of
the world’s most alarming processes
of environmental degradation. The issue is often obscured,
however, by a common misperception: that it’s a “natural” problem
of advancing deserts in faraway developing countries.
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| By :. Kushal Gangopadhyay
,India |
In fact, Desertification
is about land degradation: the loss of the land’s biological productivity,
caused by human-induced factors and climate change. It
affects one third of the earth’s surface and over
a billion people. Moreover, it has potentially devastating
consequences in terms of social and economic costs.
With
the adoption in 1994 of the United
Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD),
the issue was given proper recognition. Desertification
as a global challenge, together with Climate Change and
Biodiversity, now enjoys the support of a strong coalition
of partners. But public awareness has not kept pace. In
relation to the true scope and magnitude of the problem,
Desertification still receives too little attention and
is little understood by the public at large . In
view of this situation, the twenty-second session of the
United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), recalling
the UNCCD, the Plan of Implementation of the World Summit
on Sustainable Development and the Environment Initiative
of the New Partnership for Africa’s Development
(NEPAD), invited the General Assembly of the United Nations
to consider declaring an international year of deserts and
desertification
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| By :. Roberto
Neumiller ,Mauritania |
Subsequently, at its 58 th ordinary session, the General
Assembly declared 2006 the International Year of Deserts
and Desertification (IYDD). In doing so, the General Assembly
underlined its deep concern for the exacerbation of desertification,
particularly in Africa, and noted its far-reaching implications
for the implementation of the Millennium Development Goals
(MDGs) which must be met by 2015.
At the 2002 World Summit on Sustainable
Development, the Convention was singled out as a key instrument
for poverty eradication in dryland rural areas. The IYDD therefore
presents a golden opportunity to get the message across strongly
and effectively that Desertification is a global problem
which we ignore at our peril. It also provides an impulse
to strengthen the visibility and importance of the drylands
issue on the international environmental agenda, while providing
a timely reminder to the international community of the immense
challenges that still lie ahead. It is important to
recognize, however, that drylands are also home to some of
the most magnificent ecosystems of this world: the deserts.
These unique natural habitats with their incredibly diverse
fauna have been home to some of the world’s oldest
civilizations. They stand like open-air museums, bearing
witness to bygone eras. The Year will therefore also celebrate
the fragile beauty and unique heritage of the world’s
deserts, which deserve protection. To achieve a common
strategy for the celebration of the IYDD, an inter-agency
committee has been set up, bringing together the principal
institutional partners of the United Nations active in the
UNCCD implementation process, including UNEP, UNDP, IFAD,
and other relevant UN bodies. All countries and civil society
organizations are encouraged to undertake special initiatives
to mark the Year and to get involved in any way possible.
Through a concerted effort to raise awareness of Desertification,
we can help stimulate efforts to fight it and make the International
Year count.
.
Phyllis
Strupp
Come Home to the Desert
www.desertspirituality.com |