8 Millennium Goals
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Transcript of 8 Millennium Goals
Eight ways to change the world
FACT FILE4.4 billion people live in LEDCs. Of these: • Three-fifths lack basic sanitation • Almost one third have no access to clean water • A quarter do not have adequate housing • A fifth have no access to modern health services • A fifth of children do not attend to the end of
primary school • A fifth do not have adequate protein and energy
from their food supplies
• Human Development Report, 1998
Millennium Development Goals
• What follows is a look at photos of people living in extreme poverty
• We see first and foremost their humanity and spirit and dedication even in the midst of extreme
deprivation
• Their eyes don’t call for our pity, but for our camaraderie and partnership and empathy
1. to eradicate extreme poverty and hunger
Kadija (9) and Mobina (3) beg at the local market for the rest of their family. Collectively they earn between 50p & £1.30 a day.
2. to give all children a primary school education
Tayee Haile Micale, 10, wants to be a head teacher when he grows up. “I like my head teacher. I think he’s good. I want to be like him.”
3. to promote gender equality and empower women
Guatemala is one of the 70 countries to have failed to achieve the Millennium Development Goal of gender parity in education in 2005.
4. to reduce by two thirds the mortality rate among children under five
Julienne Duvalier (18) and daughter Marie (2) at the Jaime Mota regional hospital. Marie has a respiratory disease and needs urgent treatment, so is being given antibiotics intravenously.
5. to improve maternalhealth
It was a difficult delivery as the baby was born breached and in need of oxygen to stay alive. Noorjahan was lucky to be in the district hospital for the birth. In Orissa, only 22% of women give birth in hospital. Among tribal women the figure is only 8.7%.
6. to combat HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseasesAnthony Mpundu found out he
was HIV positive when he went for a test after his wife died in 1998. He has been on antiretroviral (ARV) drugs since 2002 and feels strong enough to cultivate his land.
“I’m so happy that I’m alive again. I tell everyone that they should not be ashamed to test themselves. I don’t want to live in fear. I don’t want to think about death every day. I want to know for sure that I can take ARV my whole life, even when I’m old.”
7. to ensure environmental sustainability
A woman and baby at a traditional well. Women in the region work constantly
collecting water and firewood. Sometimes they have to walk 15km per day to find a suitable well and may have
to wait up to 10 hours in a queue to draw the water.
8. To develop a global partnership for development