Executive Board session wraps up with key decisions
By Roshni Karwal NEW YORK, USA, 18 September 2008 – In closing remarks at the UNICEF Executive Board second regular session of 2008, Executive Director Ann M. Veneman thanked the board for decisions taken on many key issues this week. Among these were the extension of the organisation’s mid-term strategic plan for 2006-09 and modification of the system for allocating regular resources to UNICEF’s worldwide programs. Veneman also noted that important insights came out of the board’s special-focus session on policy and advocacy for children's rights. She said the increase in funding for this area was gratifying. UNICEF’s critical priorities The Executive Board session, which concluded with yesterday’s meeting, began on Monday at United Nations headquarters in New York. Veneman cited seven critical priorities addressed at the session:
The Executive Director went on to highlight ongoing UN efforts to mitigate the effects of rising food and fuel prices in the developing world, as well as UNICEF's support for these efforts at the global and national levels. Need for research and data At the closing meeting, board members also discussed the importance of improved research, data and evaluation to better target UNICEF’s investments in programs and, more important, to advise governments on children’s issues. The discussion centred on the Florence-based Innocenti Research Centre, UNICEF’s main research arm. Innocenti was founded in 1988 to promote awareness and implementation of the Convention on the Rights of the Child in both industrialised and developing countries. Following a report on the research centre’s progress, the board approved its proposal for an extension of its work. AIDS and young people In another core area, the Executive Board reviewed the Unite for Children, Unite against AIDS global campaign on young people affected by the HIV pandemic. Veneman emphasised the drive towards greater collaborative work with sister UN agencies and other partners on the issue of children and AIDS. The more effectively all parties work together toward common targets for prevention and treatment, she said, the more effective the results will be. Finally, Veneman paid tribute to two long-serving UNICEF staff members attending the board session: Esther Guluma, Regional Director for West and Central Africa, who will retire by the end of the year, and Gianfranco Rotigliano, who will succeed Guluma as Regional Director.
Video UNICEF Executive Board 2008 Newsline 18 September 2008: 4 June 2008: 13 February 2008: 4 February 2008: 31 January 2008: 30 January 2008: |