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Press
Release..............................
UNESCAP News Services
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Date 26
April 2004
Press Release No: G/10/2004
TWENTY-THREE NATIONS SIGN ACCORD ON ASIAN HIGHWAY
NETWORK
SHANGHAI (UN Information Services) -- Exceeding
early estimates, 23 Asian countries signed an international
agreement for completing a transcontinental network of standardized
roadways, at a Shanghai meeting of the UN Economic and Social
Commission for Asia and the Pacific (UNESCAP).
"From Tokyo to Tehran, from Singapore to
Samarkand, and from points beyond to those in between, the network
now spans 32 countries and encompasses more than 140,000 kilometres",
United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan said in a message
delivered to the signing ceremony at the UNESCAP economic summit
in Shanghai.
The completed highway will further facilitate
border-crossing for people, vehicles and goods, and also impart
crucial benefits to landlocked countries, as provided for in
a United Nations conference last August in Alamaty, Kazakhstan,
the Secretary-General noted. His message was delivered by UNESCAP
Executive Secretary Kim Hak-Su to ministerial-level Asian leaders
at today's signing ceremony.
Bangkok-based UNESCAP has been negotiating routes
and road specifications for the network since 1992. The text
of an agreement for upgrading sub-standard stretches and making
provisions for new routes was agreed by 32 participating countries
in November of 2003. At that time, United Nations officials
estimated that 10-15 nations would have completed the necessary
approval processes to be ready to sign at the UNESCAP annual
meeting in April 2004. Last week, up to 20 signings were projected.
The early show of support for the project "clearly
demonstrates the desire and capacity of Asian countries to work
together, now and for the future, to achieve common goals",
said UNESCAP Executive Secretary Kim.
For more information, contact Tim Wall of the
Development Section of the UN Department of Public Information,
e-mail: wallt@un.org; or Margaret Hanley of the Bangkok UN Information
Service, e-mail: hanley@un.org.
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