To: List IAHF LIST
Subject: United Nations Millennium Declaration Viewed On a Basis of the UN Codex Vitamin Issue Please Read the Millenium Declaration and the Analysis Below Very Carefully
From: "International Advocates for Health Freedom" jham@iahf.com
Date: Thu, 14 Sep 2000 21:59:18 -0400
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Everyone: Beneath my comments, which I encourage APFN to forward to a larger group of people in order to help wake them up, you will find a horribly accurate assessment of the UN Millenium Declaration, along with the Millenium Declaration itself- (which none of us certainly had any input into whatsoever.) I strongly encourage all of you to take the time to read this evil dictatorial declaration because our would be overseers will never pull off this global con and be able to wield the whip hand over us if enough people wake up to see whats REALLY going on! Don't be conned by the flowery, even noble sounding language. With the UN, one must examine what they in fact DO, not what they SAY they are doing, except to scrutinize and see their agenda as I have with the UN Codex vitamin issue, through which the overall control freak, ruling elite UN genocide multinational corporate agenda is very easily exposed!
Please forward this widely unless you wish to be a slave! While you're at it, don't forget to arm yourself and join Gun Owners of America, Jews for the Preservation of Firearm Ownership, and other pro second amendment organizations- and get active in them because a concerted effort is being made right now to disarm us just as people in the UK, Canada and Australia have been disarmed. UN troops will have to KILL an awful lot of Americans if they think they're going to lay this ruling elite genocide agenda on us here, and I intend to take out as many of them as I possibly can. "Too radical?" "Eldredge Cleaver when we need Martin Luther King?" Nah- I'm just honest, and my eyes are open-thats all. The New Hampshire license plate sums it up: Live Free or Die! Do you REALLY want to be a SLAVE??? U.N. = SLAVERY and GENOCIDE for all (but the ruling elite). Wake up!
Angie and APFN- (also IAHF and allied health freedom groups)
Angie- You wanted to know if anyone bothered to read the UN's Millenium Declaration (below). Well I did, and have been following this issue of world totalitarian dictatorship very closely due to my efforts to apprise vitamin consumers in the USA and all over the world of the despicable pharmaceutical agenda, (being carried out under the auspices of the UN's Codex Alimentarius Commission's Committee on Nutrition and Foods for Special Dietary Use) to ban our access to vitamins and minerals within the therapeutic range, and to ban all other dietary supplements not having RDA's, except by prescription, at outrageously high prices- which will effectively kill off huge numbers of us in keeping with the UN's genocide agenda to reduce world population by any means possible- (except of course amongst the ruling elite who pull the strings from behind the scenes as you quite correctly point out.)
APFN could focus badly needed attention on the dangers of global governance through the UN by examining the Codex vitamin issue because a huge number of Americans as well as others around the world use vitamins and other natural healing substances due to the growing realization that toxic pharmaceutical drugs are increasingly being rendered superflous as we continue learning how to prevent and treat all the world's diseases far more safely, effectively, and far less expensively via the use of vitamins, minerals, amino acids, trace elements, pro biotics, hormones, herbs, and other natural healing substances.
I am not impressed by the UN's flowery language either because I've attended 3 UN meetings first hand and have seen what in FACT goes in inside the UN, which is NOT the "world saviour" that their PR tries to depict it as, in REALITY it is nothing more than the construct of the greediest, most evil band of genocidal killers to ever roam the earth, and their noble sounding words don't square at all with the awful reality of their deeds which clearly reflect their TRUE agenda.
At the most recent UN Codex meeting pertaining to vitamins, I didn't even bother to set foot inside the meeting because I was banned from participating due to my efforts as a whistleblower. I was thrown off the US delegation to the Codex Committee on Nutrition and Foods for Special Dietary Use by Dr. Beth Yetley of the FDA due to my efforts to expose her criminal wrongdoing and violations of US law at Codex as she attempts to set us up for harmonization to some outrageously restrictive unfolding Codex vitamin regulations. As a licensed member of the press, Jurgen Kundke, press officer of the German Bgvv (their FDA), which hosted this UN meeting on behalf of the pharmaceutical industry which dominates German politics, refused via email to honor my press credentials due to my efforts to expose the truth about Codex and about the UN. So, I went to Germany anyway and participated in a street demonstration, and counter meeting organized by Matthias Rath MD http://www.rath.nl in order to protest the grossly undemocratic, totally farcical Codex "process" which is totally rigged to force the multinational pharmeutical agenda down our throuts, regardless of how the people of the world feel. I encourage APFN to alert more people to the UN Codex vitamin issue which is discussed in depth at http://www.iahf.com as we continue to build a larger global grass roots coalition of vitamin and herb consumers to oppose this whole scam- the suppression of vitamins of which is just one small part- albeit a part that can be used to wake lots of people up. In the USA in '94 millions of American vitamin consumers were jubilant about passing the Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act, and they engaged in the largest letter writing campaign on a single issue in the history of the US congress. All of these people must WAKE UP! Whats happening at Codex is setting us up for the forced harmonization of our vitamin laws to a VERY restrictive emerging international standard.
At 12:17 AM 9/13/00 -0700, you wrote:
United Nations Millennium Declaration
http://www.InsideTheWeb.com/mbs.cgi/mb1075995
"A.C." angie1@planetsos.com wrote:
Friends,
Today on radio I heard the hour's host say that not one in ten thousand will read this UN Declaration. If that is true, then it seems probable that only one or two, on this list, will, in fact, read it. Because of the urgent need to know what this declaration means for each individual in its entirety, I'm most curious to know just how many of you on this list will choose to read and understand the full essence of it. So, if not any trouble for those of you who read this declaration studiously, please contact me and let me know that you did. This information is strictly for my own understanding and will not be used in any way to make a point to anyone about specifics, except perhaps to make a general comment briefly about it on this forum, sometime. No personal data will be shared, however. I just want to know how many will care to read this very important, though realistically useless, declaration of intent. Hint: It's a short read, about 11 pages, and simple enough for any of us to plainly understand in a reasonable amount of time. Some comments concerning it follow:
Without a vote or any endorsement whatsoever, from the peoples of the world, the UN (in the persons of the 150 nation heads who attended) affirm by themselves, on behalf of 6 billion some souls, that they are "determined" (read will force,) to establish their world government under the unnatural precepts of the UN Charter. As I understand such overhanded and forceful resolve in the course of history, this is dictatorial and hideous fascism, in its most literal sense. To add insult to the utmost injury, they perform this despotic act under the highest Machiavellian deception, using the loftiest, high minded terms, that appear benign and even noble, to the unknowing billions of the planet, when the whole intent is absolute slavery for all. Knowing what the much touted world government is actually about, having experienced it to this extent, certainly we should see that the planners doublespeak when we know that here they actually mean that "the central challenge we face today is to ensure positive globalization...," but this means the total looting and enslaving of the world is the main goal. Seeing the progressing results of how negative globalization truly is for all but the heads of multinational corporations and their bankers, how can we, the people of all nations, consider it any differently?
Note this bit of double speak: they ".. support the sovereign equality of all States..." This is an absolute lie, according to all their ensuing statements. This statement on the first page contradicts sharply all of the plainly put "dictates" in the declaration that they tell you that they are "determined" to enforce on the world.
This just made official world "law," (make no mistake about it) has now been fully put into effect by the "actual" leaders of the world. We know who they are. Take a close look at the usage of "human rights" in the Declaration. We recognize from the evidence of all the blood that has recently flowed, that the UN (via its main backers) government uses "human rights" as the main new era virtue it must enforce to the utmost, by any means whatsoever. This should alarm all of us, as we all know what the UN and its bully of last resort, NATO, commits, when it propagandizes its deadly intentions under the rubric of "human rights." Lest we forget, the tears and blood still run in Panama, Iraq, Somalia, Bosnia, Kosovo, East Timor, and in other victim nations of these world political/military organizations.
This historical Declaration is in fact a warning, not a plea. It is a series of clear dictates, using the typical flowery language, but clear in this particular declaration, that the distribution of wealth from developed nations to undeveloped nations, WILL occur, must occur at a faster and more complete pace. In essence, the Declaration puts the developed nations on notice.
The declaration is an act of war against the people of the richer nations but at the same time, it is a death sentence meted out on the poorer nations. The enforced chain of events that will spill from the most intrusive management of every aspect of people's lives, will work to finish the slow destruction now underway. The official decrees in this declaration will only serve to utterly destroy this now interdependent world, but as one unit.
Those of us who follow the IMF/World Bank looting schemes of richer nations to further exploit unmercifully the poor nations, at the cost of all, will understand that this declaration forms a final warning to the world to accept world government. They are telling us that nothing and no one will stop the course of events dictated by international institutions.
And this occurs while the true culprits of its confounded invention, hide in their fabulously opulent lairs, with never an intent of sharing their private fortunes, always looted from the subjects of the world community. While these 150 utopian leaders uselessly talk about "equal rights and unevenly distributed benefits," the globalized economy, "the highest form of capitalism," depends completely on deindustrializing the developed nations, exporting their factories to abjectly poor nations, and there enforcing the globalized slave labor under the same horrendous conditions of yesteryear's slave trading cruelties.
What the clear intent here is, the enforcement of "a shared future" in a new and very dark age for the whole planet, except for a tiny ruling elite in each region of the utopian planet. Whether the common "world citizen" believes it or not, the point is, the architects of this new universe believe it, and they intend to use every means to justify their ends.
The Declaration makes clear, very clear, that the intent is to disarm all citizens. This deadly move will follow shortly, or the attempt of it, will.
ac
============================================================
United Nations Millennium Declaration
Fifty-fifth session
Item 61 (b) of the provisional agenda**
[snip]
32. We solemnly reaffirm, on this historic occasion, that the United Nations is the indispensable common house of the entire human family, through which we will seek to realize our universal aspirations for peace, cooperation and development. We, therefore, pledge our unstinting support for these common objectives, and our determination to achieve them.
[snip]
http://www.UN.org/millennium/declaration/a55L2.htm
==========================================================================
<< indispensable common house of the entire human family >> WRONG! GOD!
The truth about the United Nations! More and more Americans are coming to the chilling realization that U.S. membership in the United Nations poses a very real threat to our survival
as a free and independent nation. Here are some good reasons to be concerned:
http://www.apfn.org/apfn/un.htm
==========================================================================
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the purpose of chemtrails
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Bill Velek, Pro-Gun Judge & Prosecutor
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The truth about the United Nations!
http://www.InsideTheWeb.com/mbs.cgi/mb1075995
Fifty-fifth session
Item 61 (b) of the provisional agenda**
The Millennium Assembly of the United Nations
Draft resolution referred by the General Assembly at its fifty-fourth session United Nations Millennium Declaration
The General Assembly, Adopts the following Declaration:
United Nations Millennium Declaration
I. Values and Principles
1. We, Heads of State and Government, have gathered at United Nations Headquarters in New York from 6 to 8 September 2000, at the dawn of a new Millennium, to reaffirm our faith in the Organization and its Charter as indispensable foundations of a more peaceful, prosperous and just world.
2. We recognize that, in addition to our separate responsibilities to our individual societies, we have a collective responsibility to uphold the principles of human dignity, equality and equity at the global level. As leaders we have a duty, therefore, to all the world's people, especially the most vulnerable and, in particular, the children of the world, to whom the future belongs.
3. We reaffirm our commitment to the purposes and principles of the Charter of the United Nations, which have proved timeless and universal. Indeed, their relevance and capacity to inspire have increased, as nations and peoples have become increasingly interconnected and interdependent.
4. We are determined to establish a just and lasting peace all over the world in accordance with the objectives and principles of the Charter. We rededicate ourselves to support all efforts to uphold the sovereign equality of all States; respect for their territorial integrity and political independence; resolution of disputes by peaceful means and in conformity with the principles of justice and international law; the right to self-determination of peoples which remain under colonial domination and foreign occupation; non-interference in the internal affairs of States; respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms; respect for the equal rights of all without distinction to race, sex, language or religion; and international cooperation in solving international problems of economic, social, cultural or humanitarian character.
5. We believe that the central challenge we face today is to ensure that globalization becomes a positive force for all the world's people. For while globalization offers great opportunities, at present its benefits are very unevenly shared, while its costs are unevenly distributed. We recognize that developing countries and countries with economies in transition face special difficulties in responding to this central challenge. Thus, only through broad and sustained efforts to create a shared future, based upon our common humanity in all its diversity, can globalization be made fully inclusive and equitable. These efforts must include policies and measures, at the global level, which correspond to the needs of developing countries and economies in transition, and are formulated and implemented with their effective participation.
6. We consider certain fundamental values to be essential to international relations in the twenty-first century. These include:
Freedom. Men and women have the right to live their lives and raise their children in dignity, free from hunger and from the fear of violence, oppression or injustice. Democratic and participatory governance based on the will of the people best assures these rights.
. Equality. No individual and no nation must be denied the opportunity to benefit from development. The equal rights and opportunities of women and men must be assured.
Solidarity. Global challenges must be managed in a way that distributes the costs and burdens fairly in accordance with basic principles of equity and social justice. Those who suffer, or who benefit least, deserve help from those who benefit most.
Tolerance. Human beings must respect each other, in all their diversity of belief, culture and language. Differences within and between societies should be neither feared nor repressed, but cherished as a precious asset of humanity. A Culture of Peace and Dialogue among all civilizations should be actively promoted.
Respect for nature. Prudence must be shown in the management of all living species and natural resources, in accordance with the precepts of sustainable development. Only in this way can the immeasurable riches provided to us by nature be preserved and passed on to our descendants. The current unsustainable patterns of production and consumption must be changed, in the interest of our future welfare and that of our descendants.
Shared responsibility. Responsibility for managing worldwide economic and social development, as well as threats to international peace and security, must be shared among the nations of the world and should be exercised multilaterally. As the most universal and most representative organization in the world, the United Nations must play the central role.
7. In order to translate these shared values into actions, we have identified key objectives to which we assign special significance:
II. Peace, Security and Disarmament 8. We will spare no effort to free our peoples from the scourge of war, whether within or between States, which has claimed more than 5 million lives in the past decade. We will also seek to eliminate the dangers posed by weapons of mass destruction.
9. We resolve, therefore:
To strengthen respect for the rule of law, in international as in national affairs and, in particular, to ensure compliance by Member States with the decisions of the International Court of Justice, in compliance with the Charter of the United Nations, in cases to which they are parties.
To make the United Nations, more effective in maintaining peace and security, by giving it the resources and tools it needs for conflict prevention, peaceful resolution of disputes, peacekeeping, post-conflict peace building and reconstruction. In this context, we take note of the Report of the Panel on United Nations Peace Operations and request the General Assembly to consider its recommendations expeditiously.
To strengthen cooperation between the United Nations and regional organizations, in accordance with the provisions of Chapter VIII of the Charter.
To ensure the implementation, by States Parties, of treaties in areas such as arms control and disarmament, and of international humanitarian law and human rights law, and call upon all States to consider signing and ratifying the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court.
To take concerted action against international terrorism, and to accede as soon as possible to all the relevant international conventions.
To redouble our efforts to implement our commitment to counter the world drug problem.
To intensify our efforts to fight transnational crime in all its dimensions, including trafficking as well as smuggling in human beings and money laundering.
To minimize the adverse effects of United Nations economic sanctions on innocent populations; to subject such sanctions regimes to regular reviews; and to eliminate the adverse effects of sanctions on third parties.
To strive for the elimination of weapons of mass destruction, particularly nuclear weapons and to keep all options open for achieving this aim, including the possibility of convening an international conference to identify ways of eliminating nuclear dangers.
To take concerted action to end illicit traffic in small arms and light weapons, especially by making arms transfers more transparent and supporting regional disarmament measures, taking account of all the recommendations of the forthcoming United Nations Conference on Illicit Trade in Small Arms and Light Weapons.
To call on all States to consider acceding to the Convention on the Prohibition of the Use, Stockpiling, Production and Transfer of Anti-Personnel Mines and on Their Destruction, as well as the Amended Mines Protocol to the Convention on Conventional Weapons.
10. We urge Member States to observe the Olympic Truce, individually and collectively, now and in the future, and to support the International Olympic Committee in its efforts to promote peace and human understanding through sport and the Olympic ideal.
III. Development and Poverty Eradication 11. We will spare no effort to free our fellow men, women and children from the abject and dehumanizing conditions of extreme poverty, to which more than a billion of them are currently subjected. We are committed to making the right to development a reality for everyone, and to freeing the entire human race from want.
12. We resolve, therefore, to create an environment at the national and global levels alike which is conducive to development and to the elimination of poverty.
13. Success in meeting these objectives depends, inter alia, on good governance within each country. It also depends on good governance at the international level, and on transparency in the financial, monetary and trading systems. We are committed to an open, equitable, rule-based, predictable and non-discriminatory multilateral trading and financial system.
14. We are concerned about the obstacles developing countries face in mobilizing the resources needed to finance their sustained development. We will, therefore, make every effort to ensure the success of the High-level International and Intergovernmental Event on Financing for Development, to be held in 2001.
15. We also undertake to address the special needs of the least developed countries. In this context, we welcome the Third United Nations Conference on the Least Developed Countries in May 2001 and will endeavour to ensure its success. We call on the industrialized countries:
to adopt, preferably by the time of that Conference, a policy of duty- and quota-free access for essentially all exports from the least developed countries;
to implement the enhanced programme of debt relief for the heavily indebted poor countries without further delay and to agree to cancel all official bilateral debts of those countries in return for their making demonstrable commitments to poverty reduction;
and to grant more generous development assistance, especially to countries that are genuinely making an effort to apply their resources to poverty reduction.
16. We are also determined to deal comprehensively and effectively with the debt problems of low- and middle-income developing countries, through various national and international measures designed to make their debt sustainable in the long term.
17. We also resolve to address the special needs of small island developing States, by implementing the Barbados Programme of Action, and the outcome of the twenty-second special session of the General Assembly, rapidly and in full. We urge the international community to ensure that, in the development of a vulnerability index, the special needs of small island developing States are taken into account.
18. We recognize the special needs and problems of the landlocked developing countries, and urge both bilateral and multilateral donors to increase financial and technical assistance to this group of countries to meet their special development needs, and to help them overcome the impediments of geography, by improving their transit transport systems.
19. We resolve further:
To halve, by the year 2015, the proportion of the world's people whose income is less than one dollar a day and the proportion of people who suffer from hunger; and also, by the same date, to halve the proportion of people who are unable to reach, or to afford, safe drinking water.
To ensure that, by the same date, children everywhere, boys and girls alike, will be able to complete a full course of primary schooling; and that girls and boys will have equal access to all levels of education.
By the same date, to have reduced maternal mortality by three quarters, and under-5 child mortality by two thirds, of their current rates.
To have, by then, halted, and begun to reverse, the spread of HIV/AIDS, the scourge of malaria and other major diseases that afflict humanity.
To provide special assistance to children orphaned by HIV/AIDS.
By 2020, to have achieved a significant improvement in the lives of at least 100 million slum dwellers as proposed in the "Cities Without Slums" initiative.
20. We also resolve:
To promote gender equality and the empowerment of women, as effective ways to combat poverty, hunger and disease and to stimulate development that is truly sustainable.
To develop and implement strategies that give young people everywhere a real chance to find decent and productive work.
To encourage the pharmaceutical industry to make essential drugs more widely available and affordable by all who need them in developing countries.
To develop strong partnerships with the private sector, and with civil society organizations, in pursuit of development and poverty eradication.
To ensure that the benefits of new technologies, especially information and communication technologies, in conformity with recommendations contained in ECOSOC 2000 Ministerial Declaration, are available to all.
IV. Protecting our Common Environment
21. We must spare no effort to free all of humanity, and above all our children and grandchildren, from the threat of living on a planet irredeemably spoilt by human activities, and whose resources would no longer be sufficient for their needs.
22. We reaffirm our support for the principles of sustainable development, including those set out in Agenda 21, agreed upon at the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development.
23. We resolve, therefore, to adopt in all our environmental actions a new ethic of conservation and stewardship, and, as first steps we resolve:
To make every effort to ensure the entry into force of the Kyoto Protocol, preferably by the tenth anniversary of the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development in 2002, and to embark on the required reduction in emissions of greenhouse gases.
To intensify our collective efforts for the management, conservation and sustainable development of all types of forests.
To press for the full implementation of the Convention on Biological Diversity and the Convention to Combat Desertification in Countries Experiencing Serious Drought and/or Desertification, Particularly in Africa.
To stop the unsustainable exploitation of water resources, by developing water management strategies at the regional, national and local levels, which promote both equitable access and adequate supplies.
To intensify cooperation to reduce the number and effects of natural and man-made disasters.
To ensure free access to information on the human genome sequence.
V. Human Rights, Democracy and Good Governance
24. We will spare no effort to promote democracy and strengthen the rule of law, as well as respect for all internationally recognized human rights and fundamental freedoms, including the right to development.
25. We resolve, therefore:
To fully respect and uphold the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
To strive for the full protection and promotion in all our countries of civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights for all.
To strengthen the capacity of all our countries to implement the principles and practices of democracy and respect for human rights, including minority rights.
To combat all forms of violence against women and to implement the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women.
To take measures to ensure respect for and protection of the human rights of migrants, migrant workers and their families, to eliminate the increasing acts of racism and xenophobia in many societies, and to promote greater harmony and tolerance in all societies.
To work collectively for more inclusive political processes, allowing genuine participation by all citizens in all our countries.
To ensure the freedom of the media to perform their essential role and the right of the public to have access to information.
VI. Protecting the Vulnerable 26. We will spare no effort to ensure that children and all civilian populations who suffer disproportionately the consequences of natural disasters, genocide, armed conflicts and other humanitarian emergencies are given every assistance and protection, so that they can resume normal life as soon as possible.
We resolve, therefore:
To expand and strengthen the protection of civilians in complex emergencies, in conformity with international humanitarian law.
To strengthen international cooperation, including burden sharing in, and the coordination of humanitarian assistance to countries hosting refugees; and to help all refugees and displaced persons to return voluntarily to their homes, in safety and dignity, and to be smoothly reintegrated into their societies.
To encourage the ratification and full implementation of the Convention on the Rights of the Child and its Optional Protocols on the involvement of children in armed conflicts, and on the sale of children, child prostitution and child pornography.
VII. Meeting the Special Needs of Africa
27. We will support the consolidation of democracy in Africa and assist Africans in their struggle for lasting peace, poverty eradication and sustainable development, thereby bringing Africa into the mainstream of the world economy.
28. We resolve, therefore:
To give full support to the political and institutional structures of emerging democracies in Africa.
To encourage and sustain regional and subregional mechanisms for preventing conflict and promoting political stability, and to ensure a reliable flow of resources for peacekeeping operations on the continent.
To take special measures to address the challenges of poverty eradication and sustainable development in Africa, including debt cancellation, improved market access, enhanced Official Development Assistance (ODA), and increased flows of Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) as well as transfers of technology.
To help Africa build up its capacity to tackle the spread of the HIV/AIDS pandemic and other infectious diseases.
VIII. Strengthening the United Nations
29. We will spare no effort to make the United Nations a more effective instrument for pursuing all of these priorities: the fight for development for all the peoples of the world, the fight against poverty, ignorance and disease; the fight against injustice; the fight against violence, terror and crime; and the fight against the degradation and destruction of our common home.
30. We resolve, therefore:
To reaffirm the central position of the General Assembly as the chief deliberative, policy-making and representative organ of the United Nations, and to enable it to play that role effectively.
To intensify our efforts to achieve a comprehensive reform of the Security Council in all its aspects.
To further strengthen the Economic and Social Council, building on its recent achievements, to help it fulfil the role ascribed to it in the Charter.
To strengthen the International Court of Justice, in order to ensure justice and the rule of law in international affairs.
To encourage regular consultations and coordination among the principal organs of the United Nations in pursuit of their functions.
To ensure that the Organization is provided on a timely and predictable basis with the resources it needs to carry out its mandates.
To urge the Secretariat to make the best use of those resources, in accordance with clear rules and procedures agreed by the General Assembly, in the interests of all Member States, by adopting the best management practices and technologies available and by concentrating on those tasks that reflect the agreed priorities of Member States.
To promote adherence to the Convention on the Safety of United Nations and Associated Personnel.
To ensure greater policy coherence and to improve better cooperation between the United Nations, its agencies, the Bretton Woods Institutions, and the World Trade Organization, as well as other multilateral bodies, with a view to achieving a fully coordinated approach to the problems of peace and development.
To further strengthen cooperation between the United Nations and national parliaments through their world organization, the Inter-Parliamentary Union, in various fields, including: peace and security, economic and social development, international law and human rights, democracy and gender issues.
To give greater opportunities to the private sector, non-governmental organizations and civil society in general, to contribute to the realization of the Organization's goals and programmes.
31. We request the General Assembly to review on a regular basis the progress made in implementing the provisions of this Declaration, and ask the Secretary-General to issue periodic reports, for consideration by the General Assembly and as a basis for further action.
32. We solemnly reaffirm, on this historic occasion, that the United Nations is the indispensable common house of the entire human family, through which we will seek to realize our universal aspirations for peace, cooperation and development. We, therefore, pledge our unstinting support for these common objectives, and our determination to achieve them.