New Zealanders join record-breaking event
Te Kaunihera mo te Whakapakari Ao Whanui Ao Aotearoa/Council for International Development
New Zealanders join record-breaking event
MORE than 20,000 New Zealanders took part in an anti-poverty campaign last weekend – joining 173 million people worldwide and breaking the world record for the largest number of people to participate in a global event.
Local organisers say the total participation of
21,233 New Zealanders was twice the expected
number.
“More than 20 schools participated and the event had cross-party support, with MPs from National, Labour, the Green Party and United Future all attending the event in Wellington’s Civic Square” says Edmund Barker, Stand Up campaign coordinator.
The Guinness World Record event counted 173,045,325 people gathered at over 3,000 events in more than 120 countries, demanding that their governments work to eradicate extreme poverty and achieve the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).
“The more than 173 million people who mobilised this weekend sent a clear message to world leaders that there is massive, universal, global demand for eradicating poverty and achieving the Millennium Development Goals,” said Salil Shetty, Director of the United Nations Millennium Campaign.
“In particular, we have seen citizens determined to show their governments that they will hold them accountable for keeping their promises to end hunger, improve maternal health and abolish trade‐distorting agricultural subsidies. They will not accept excuses for breaking promises to the world’s poorest and most vulnerable people, who have already been the hardest hit by the global food, economic and climate crises they had no role in causing.”
Currently one billion people around the world are hungry and 500,000 women continue to die annually as the result of pregnancy and childbirth. The vast majority of these deaths are preventable.
The event, now in its fourth year, is organised globally by the United Nations Millennium Campaign, in partnership with a range of organisations including the Global Call to Action Against Poverty (GCAP). See www.standagainstpoverty.org for more details.
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