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Press
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UNESCAP News Services
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Date 26
April 2004
Press Release No: L/16/2004
THE SECRETARY-GENERAL
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MESSAGE TO SIGNING CEREMONY
FOR THE INTERGOVERNMENTAL AGREEMENT
ON THE ASIAN HIGHWAY NETWORK
Shanghai, 26 April 2004
Delivered by Mr. Kim Hak-su, Executive Secretary,
United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the
Pacific
People throughout Asia -- leaders, businesspeople
and ordinary citizens -- have long dreamt of an efficient and
reliable transport system that would link their countries in
webs of prosperity and exchange. Today, with the signing of
the Intergovernmental Agreement on the Asian Highway Network,
that vision is becoming a reality.
Asia's future, like that of other regions, is
closely entwined with the process of globalization and the rapid
spread of information technologies. But infrastructure such
as highways and roads have just as crucial a role to play in
creating opportunities for economic growth and social progress,
and in overcoming the region's widespread poverty and inequality.
The Agreement on the Asian Highway Network is thus a major step
forward.
From Tokyo to Tehran, from Singapore to Samarkand,
and from points beyond to those in between, the network now
spans thirty-two countries and encompasses more than 140,000
kilometres. It will facilitate border-crossing for people, vehicles
and goods. It promises to accelerate regional integration and
economic cooperation in general, and marks a milestone in the
implementation of the Amaty Programme of Action for both landlocked
and transit countries. It offers a common platform to promote
tourism, since countries linked by the network share a wealth
of natural beauty and historical and cultural heritage. And
it addresses important environmental considerations by highlighting
the need to undertake an environmental impact assessment when
new road projects are prepared and when existing roads are reconstructed
or improved.
This is also the first intergovernmental agreement
developed under the auspices of the United Nations Economic
and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific. I would like
to commend the ESCAP Secretariat for its initiative, and for
helping ESCAP's members to forge this exciting new partnership.
Such efforts show the creative and constructive role that can
be played by this and other United Nations regional commissions.
As countries and people set off down this road,
I hope we will see the same spirit of common purpose that enabled
governments to resolve their differences and produce this Agreement.
Our destination is clear: the Millennium Development Goals,
and a world of stability, well-being and peace. Let us travel
there together.
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