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World's elite bring extensive agenda to U.N. summit


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Congo on some agendas

Minisummits are planned


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UNITED NATIONS -- All the world's problems will be put on the table for discussion at the U.N. Millennium Summit, running through Friday, as more than 150 kings, presidents and prime ministers arrive in New York.

Planning for the U.N. Millennium Summit has been in the works for two years, including hanging posters throughout New York to soothe residents navigating the inevitable nightmarish traffic.

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Millennium Summit
 

The session, from Wednesday to Friday, is billed as the largest-ever gathering of world leaders, even bigger than the world body's 50th anniversary celebrations five years ago, which drew some 118 heads of state and government.

But this year the programme is more ambitious.

As the leaders address the General Assembly for a proposed -- but rarely executed -- five minutes each, those not speaking are in closed round-table discussions to map out myriad programmes that would help lift people out of poverty, prevent wars and save the environment.

On the sidelines and in some forums, the critical Middle East peace process is the subject of meetings between President Bill Clinton, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak and Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat.

Barak was one of the first to arrive and met Secretary-General Kofi Annan on Monday. Iran's President Mohammad Khatami also came early and met Iranian-Americans at the United Nations following a protest against his country in which five Iranians were arrested for throwing paint.

Congo on some agendas

African leaders hope for a meeting on the Congo's many-sided civil war, although Congo President Laurent Kabila will be nowhere in sight. In Sierra Leone, rebels are fighting the government as well as U.N. peacekeepers.

A new president, Abdiqassim Salad Hassan, elected a week ago, will fill Somalia's U.N. seat for the first time in a decade.

In preparation for the meeting, Annan called in an April report for benevolent globalization in the 21st century to ensure that the information revolution did not leave billions of people behind in poverty.

When the summit meeting ends, there are to be commitments to ambitious global targets. World leaders will pledge to halve the number of the world's people who live on less than $1 a day. There are more than a billion such people.

Almost an equal number -- many of them the same ones -- do not have access to clean water. Their number should also be cut in half by 2015, leaders will say. By that year too, a primary school education should be provided to all boys and girls.

The leaders will also be asked to halt and reverse the spread of HIV/AIDS by 2015.

With every issue on the table, many are asking whether anything but vague statements can result despite the specific targets Annan has proposed.

"I would expect the summit to come up with a programme of action not just for the United Nations but also for the members states," Annan told the Royal Institute of International Affairs in London via an audio link on Monday.

"Yes, we have a major problems, so let's solve them together," he said.

Minisummits are planned

Within the summit, a series of minisummits is planned. Leaders representing the 15 countries on the Security Council will discuss peacekeeping, especially in Africa, and a recent blue-ribbon panel report on how to recruit better-trained and more professional troops.

Leaders of the five countries that are permanent council members are likely to meet separately: Clinton, Russian President Vladimir Putin, French President Jacques Chirac, British Prime Minister Tony Blair and Chinese President Jiang Zemin.

In addition, more than 700 one-on-one meetings between leaders are expected, with the United Nations setting up cubicles for those not meeting at hotels around town.

Not joining the limousine-and-sirens fest is Iraqi President Saddam Hussein, who has not left his country for at least a decade.

Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi also has not said he is attending, and Kim Jong-il of North Korea has declined. But Cuban President Fidel Castro, who came to the 1995 U.N. anniversary celebration, has decided to come.

Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic, under indictment by a U.N. tribunal for war crimes in Kosovo, will not be in New York.

Afghanistan's ruler, Mullah Mohammed Omar Mujahid, was not invited because somebody else is sitting in his chair. Burhanuddin Rabbani, the president driven out of Kabul and into exile in 1996, is speaking because the Taleban government is not recognised by the United Nations.

Copyright 2000 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.



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