Media Advisory

Presidents of Chile, Findland and Tanzania Put Mother and Child Health on the Map

19 September 2008

Contact:

Chile’s Mission to the United Nations, Belen Sapag, Tel: 1 646 283 7737, e-mail: bsapag@chileun.org

Finland’s Mission to the United Nations, Tarja Fernandez, Tel: 1 212 821 0242, e-mail: Tarja.Fernandez@formin.fi

Tanzania’s Mission to the United Nations, Maura Mwingira, Tel: 1 917 945 9232, e-mail: mauramwingira@hotmail.com

WHAT: Committing to Progress for Mothers, Newborns and Children

A special event during the United Nations High-level Meeting on the Millennium Development Goals.

With critical health care still failing to reach most women and children in the hardest hit countries, Heads of State from Chile, Finland and Tanzania are convening a special event to examine the urgent need to speed up progress to reduce maternal and child death. They will use the forum to get commitments to action and to highlight stories of successful leadership for maternal, newborn and child health from their own and other countries.

The special side event coincides with the United Nation’s High-level Event on the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) being convened at United Nations Headquarters, New York ,on 25 September. At the half-way point towards the 2015 target set to reach the Goals, MDG 4 on reducing child death and MDG 5 on improving maternal health are among those which have received the least high-level political attention.

According to the 2008 report, Tracking Progress in Maternal, Newborn & Child Survival, few of the 68 developing countries that account for 97 per cent of maternal and child deaths worldwide are making enough progress to achieve the MDGs. The majority of maternal and child deaths occur in Africa and South Asia, with sub-Saharan Africa increasingly bearing the global burden of mortality.

Worldwide, over 10 million women and children still die each year from preventable and treatable causes. This means a woman dies needlessly each minute in pregnancy or childbirth, and a child under five dies every three seconds.

Six million of these lives can be saved every year if women, newborns and children in developing nations gain access to basic health services. The side event will examine key strategies which are saving the lives of women and children poor communities.

Each of the host Presidents will ask the group to renew their commitments to maternal and child health and introduce specific initiatives. They will call for political action to achieve MDGs 4 and 5. In addition, Heads of State, United Nations agencies, senior government officials, civil society organizations, foundations and private sector companies will put forward commitments to life-saving action for women, newborns and childre

Present will be Heads of State, heads of United Nations agencies, senior government officials, civil society organizations, foundations and private sector companies.

WHEN: Thursday, 25 September – 11:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.

WHERE: UN Millennium Plaza Hotel, One United Nations Plaza (44th Street between 1st and 2nd Avenues)

WHO: The event is co-hosted by:

• President Michelle Bachelet of Chile,

• President Tarja Halonen of the Republic of Finland, and

• President Jakaya Mrisho Kikwete of Tanzania.

Note for editors:

The event is organized by a core organizing group including: Family Care International, (www.familycareintl.org, www.womendeliver.org), International Planned Parenthood Federation (www.ippf.org), Partnership for Maternal Newborn and Child Health (www.pmnch.org), Save the Children-UK, (www.savethechildren.org.uk), White Ribbon Alliance for Safe Motherhood (www.whiteribbonalliance.org), World Vision International (www.wvi.org), with support from United Kingdom’s Department for International Development – DfID (www.dfid.gov.uk), The Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation – Norad (www.norad.no), and Australian Government Overseas Aid Program – AusAID (www.ausaid.gov.au).

We use cookies and other identifiers to help improve your online experience. By using our website you agree to this, see our cookie policy

X