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GFDD/FUNGLODE closed
documentary presentation series regarding social and national security
issues
Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, April 12, 2006
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The series of documentary presentations and the following panel discussions
were aimed to increase public awareness about current issues of global
importance as hunger, nuclear weapons and peacekeeping missions.
With the presentation of
"The Peacekeepers", Global Foundation Democracy and Development (GFDD),
its sister organization in the Dominican Republic, Fundación Global
Democracia y Desarrollo (FUNGLODE), and the United Nations Association of
the Dominican Republic (UNADR),
closed the series of documentary presentation which included three films
aimed to increase public awareness and sensitize the audience about current
global issues as hunger, nuclear weapons and peacekeeping missions. This
initiative was sponsored by
Americans for Informed
Democracy.
In the first presentation
"The Silent
Killer", the audience was able to understand hunger from a powerful
documentary, followed by a discussion lead by María Paz Salas,
United Nations World
Food Program Representative in Dominican Republic, and Matilde Vásquez
Cabral, Under Secretary of Health and Nutrition, Ministry of Public Health,
Nutrition and Social Assistance (SESPAS
for its Spanish initials). Both experts alerted on the high risk that hunger
poses to humanity, and emphasized several strategies that Dominican Republic
is implementing to deal with this problem. Some of these strategies include
the creation of the Hunger and Under Nutrition Atlas of Dominican Republic;
the goal to reduce the amount of children under 5 years old below normal
weight (2.500 grams), as well as to reduce the percentage of the population
living under the minimum food-energy consumption level (2.100
Kcal/person/day), and the increase of the income proportion spend on food.
Both Salas and Vásquez Cabral highlighted the 2005 Government spending
($4,957 millions of Dominican pesos) which focused on: School Food Programs;
Vulnerable Groups Food Programs; and programs supporting food supply which
benefited primary and secondary students, and poor households.
Mrs. Salas announced a Project to eliminate child under nutrition in
Dominican Republic and other countries of the Central American Integration
System (SICA for its
Spanish initials), to be implemented with the support of the UN World Food
Program and the Interamerican Development Bank (IADB),
for ten years.
The subject of threats posed by weapons of mass destruction was discussed in
the second presentation with the documentary
"Last best chance".
The discussion panel included José Jorge Núñez Alba, Chemical Engineer,
Coordinator, Eco-Peace Mexican Network. Mr. Núñez explained the disastrous
implications that the detonation of any nuclear artifact would pose to the
world. He also emphasized the current risks and the possibilities that some
vulnerable nuclear weapons, in existence since the Cold War, could soon
explode due to lack of security measures.
He highlighted the fact that globalization and economic integration trends
in today's World pose a greater threat because of the difficulty of
effective supervision in the transportation across borders of weapons of
mass destruction and other nuclear artifacts. He pointed the example of the
enormous daily transportation movements of huge containers across the
Mexican-American border, or the amount of letters received by the U.S.
Congress that allowed Anthrax to enter the States.
Finally, peacekeeping missions were approached in the documentary
"The Peacekeepers", based in the recent UN Mission in the Democratic
Republic of Congo (MONUC).
This presentation was followed by a discussion panel lead by Ayaka Susuki,
Senior Political Affairs/Planning Officer in the United Nations
Stabilization Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH).
Mrs. Susuki explained the critical situation in Congo and highlighted the
political difficulties inside the United Nations
Security Council to
approve the mission and to define the role of the peacekeeping team
(Department of Peace Keeping Operations of the UN,
DPKO)
in convincing the member states to take action in this specific case. She
pointed to the work done by the DPKO team in published reports and the
support offered by the international press in sensitizing countries.
This documentary presentation series, part of GFDD/FUNGLODE's aim to
increase public awareness on current global issues, made it possible to
sensitize at least 250 people, many of them members of the "March 2nd"
Police Academy, students, professionals, NGOs representatives, among others.
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