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UN Launches Global Anti-Poverty Campaign
October 18, 2007
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Schoolchildren in a Kenyan slum belted out a Bob Marley ballad yesterday as they joined a continent-spanning effort to draw attention to the crushing poverty that campaigners say contributes to tens of thousands of needless deaths each day.

The "Stand Up, Speak Out" campaign is part of UN efforts to promote the Millennium Development Goals that include eradicating extreme poverty and hunger, achieving universal primary education and ensuring a sustainable environment by 2015. Hundreds of events were being staged to heighten awareness and pressure governments to act in the interests of their poorest citizens. In schools, stadiums, streets and offices from Asia to Africa, thousands of people sang songs, listened to speeches and rose briefly to their feet in moment of solidarity and protest.

"The idea has been for people to take a stand at schools, workplaces - wherever they are," said Kumi Naidoo, one of the leading organisers of the day's events. "We want people to take action where they live and work, so they can connect these global demands with issues where they live."

In the impoverished Korogocho neighbourhood of the Kenyan capital, about 1,000 pupils and a smattering of adults gathered in an outdoor amphitheatre next to a garbage dump, listening to music and watching traditional dancers stomp their feet to tattoo of skin-covered drums. The children sang We Shall Overcome in one of Kenya's languages, Swahili, then rose to their feet and held hands while wailing the refrain from Marley's One Love.

On the lawn at UN headquarters in New York, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and several hundred adults and youngsters recited a pledge to fight poverty.

Ban earlier spoke of his vision for a better world, where children complete elementary school, families are protected from deadly disease and there is no longer appalling poverty.

"Let us demonstrate the political will required to end the scourge of poverty once and for all," he said.Underlying the difficulties of eradicating entrenched poverty and its related social ills, five street kids in rags infiltrated the Nairobi event and briefly mounted the stage before the assembled schoolchildren, lurching unsteadily to the music as they huffed fumes from bottles of industrial glue.

Around the world, an estimated one billion people live on less than US$1 per day, according to UN figures. In sub-Saharan Africa, nearly one-third of the region's 750 million people live in extreme poverty, frequently without access to clean water, decent schools, health care facilities or flushing toilets. An open sewer flowed alongside the site of the Nairobi event.

Last year, 24 million people from 87 countries around the world stood up against poverty, with India leading Asians with nine million people, followed by Nepal with three million and the Philippines with 2.4 million. Organisers hoped to exceed those numbers yesterday.

Organisers say that 50,000 people die each day from preventable causes linked to poverty and they called on participants to help fight the underlying causes.

In India, the Women's Tribunal Against Poverty, an umbrella group of women activists from the country's most marginalised communities, gathered 400 activists in New Delhi to discuss their experiences of poverty and their demands from the government.

The participants, dressed in brightly coloured traditional dresses, chanted, "We will fight and we will win," and "Long live women's power".

In the Bangladeshi capital, Dhaka, hundreds of volunteers joined Mayor Sadeque Hossain at a rally in front of city hall, to call for an end to poverty. Anti-poverty rallies, concerts, and fairs were held elsewhere across the populous country, where most people still live on less than a dollar a day.

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