Pacific Plan successes and challenges
Pacific Plan successes and challenges
PRESS RELEASE
(62/10)
13th July 2010
Five years after it was endorsed by Pacific Islands Forum Leaders, the Pacific Plan has recorded some successes but there remains challenges.
In his opening remarks to the Pacific Plan Action Committee (PPAC) meeting underway in Suva, Fiji, Forum Secretariat Secretary General, Tuiloma Neroni Slade commended the work of PPAC as the body responsible for overseeing the implementation of the Plan.
“The PPAC over the last five years has played a vital role, in not only providing oversight and monitoring of the implementation of the Pacific Plan, but also in the setting of regional development priorities,” said Mr Slade.
“In a fundamental way, the PPAC reformed the manner in which the Council of Regional Organisations in the Pacific (CROP) are preparing themselves and organized to serve and support the people of the Pacific. There is no other regional gathering where all regional organizations of the Pacific, sit side by side with member countries to discuss how regional resources can and should be mobilized in a coordinated manner to address the key development priorities and challenges of the region.”
Mr Slade pointed out a few of the gains and successes the Pacific Plan in the first five years implementation include:
• We have strengthened regional
approaches for fisheries conservation and management through
the work of FFA and SPC and more recently through the
efforts of the Parties to the Nauru Agreement (PNA);
•
Sub-regional shipping services for the SIS countries of the
central Pacific have become operational;
• We have
refocused our now principally through the Compact for
strengthening development cooperation and coordination, in
the implementation of key principles of aid effectiveness;
Regional cooperation in the areas of audit and ombudsman
services have been established and strengthened;
• Work
on trade liberalisation, though moving gradually, have
achieved steady progress and will continue to be a key
priority as an integral component of achieving greater
regional economic integration; and
• Work on the ICT
progressing reasonably well with the recently endorsed
Framework for Action on ICT developments.
But Mr Slade told the PPAC meeting that there continue to be significant challenges which call for staying power and perseverance. This includes:
• Strong political will is an absolute
prerequisite, and must be maintained to continue the
momentum in supporting the Pacific Plan;
• Resources
must be secured to support Pacific Plan priorities and it is
incumbent that partnerships with development partners and
other regional stakeholders are properly nurtured and
fostered; and
• The Pacific Plan priorities and
initiatives must make a difference at the national level and
bring added value to the efforts of member countries in
addressing their national development priorities and
challenges. Ultimately this is the real test. We need to
demonstrate results – results which make a difference,
results which add value to the lives of people.
“I believe that the last five years provide evidence of demonstrated effort and commitment of all concerned in working together to deliver real and tangible benefits for our countries and our communities,” Mr Slade said.
The focus of the two-day meeting will be a range of regional issues, including the process of strengthening development cooperation, particularly the reports prepared for Leaders on Pacific Regional MDG Tracking, the Report on Tracking the Effectiveness of Development Efforts in the Pacific, and the Road Map on Strengthening Public Financial Management.
The PPAC meeting will be followed by the pre-Forum session of the Forum Officials Committee (FOC), the governing council of the Pacific Islands Forum Secretariat, to be held 15 -16 July.
ENDS