Stand Up and Take Action
When world leaders gather at the United Nations for the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) Review Summit in September, the voices of their citizens will follow them, telling them, loudly and clearly: “We will no longer stay seated or silent in the face of poverty and the broken promises to end it!’
The demands and expectations of citizens across continents and countries, made visible and audible throughout 2010, will culminate in the “Stand Up 2010” mobilization. Stand Up 2010 will take place over three days beginning Friday September 17th, through Sunday the 19th.
The MDG Review Summit offers us a unique opportunity to leverage and even influence the political and media focus surrounding the lead up to the meeting and the meeting itself. Moving Stand Up forward to the weekend before the Summit will allow us to drive our activities throughout the year towards a high-profile Stand Up mobilization with a direct link to and with the specific intention of impacting on the proceedings at the Summit itself. It will also allow us to focus our activities and work in 2010 towards a specific policy moment and to articulate clear and relevant policy demands based on what we want our various governments and delegations to do leading up to the Summit and what we expect them to achieve at the Summit itself.
The Dates
September 17th -19th, 2010: Three days of mobilization enabling all constituencies and anyone wanting to be a part of the mobilization to organize and participate in a wide range of events, relevant actions and initiatives to show their support for the achievement of the MDGs and have their voices heard articulating their demands for delegations attending the Summit.
Over this three day period, we are encouraging people and their organisations to continue to incorporate the Stand Up moment and pledge reading into their events and where relevant and possible to invite media to cover their events and initiatives. The Stand Up pledge will be adapted this year in line with the new timing to specifically reference the MDG Review Summit. As always, these pledges need to be adapted to incorporate relevant messaging for each participating organization or group.
One Day of Unified Global Action: Stand Up, Take Action, Make Noise for the MDGs!
September 18th, 2010 Stand Up, take Action, Make a Noise for the MDGs!: Throughout the day on September 18th, we will “Make Noise for the MDGs!”
We are encouraging people all over the world to take part in a common global action which is designed to grab public, political and media attention and to make sure that the global movement in support of the MDGs is seen and heard in every corner of the globe.
Examples of noise- making ideas include citizens gathering in a public space to bang spoons on metal plates as a way of illustrating Hunger ; Church groups and temples could arrange for their church/temple bells to be rung at the same time on that date in cities across their country; local musicians could come together to play their instruments in innovative locations – African drummers on Mt. Kilimanjaro; the French National Orchestra from the top of the Eiffel Tower; football fans in South Africa blowing their local “Vuvuzelas(trumpets) at football matches that weekend. An online action allowing people to generate a noise through an online and mobile phone application will also be made available.
Counting and the Guinness World record
This year, due to the unique nature of Stand Up 2010, the UN Millennium Campaign will not be counting participants and we will not be tying this mobilization to the Guinness World Record. Although we won’t be counting individuals, we will still be encouraging participants to let us know about their events, where they are happening, who is taking part and the desired outcomes. Register your event at www.standagainstpoverty.org.
Demanding Breakthrough Plans to Achieve the MDGs
We will be demanding that governments produce “Breakthrough Action Plans” to achieve the MDGs by 2015 and that these plans be presented, discussed and adopted as part of the outcomes at the Summit in September. These plans must incorporate a strong focus on addressing accountability: from rich countries to poor countries (at the global level) and from governments to citizens (at national and local levels), on the issue of MDGs for all. The issue of inequality across all spectrums, including gender, spatial, ethnicity including indigenous people, caste and disability, must also be addressed. In addition, these plans must include concrete proposals for overcoming implementation bottlenecks at the local level and allowing for citizen monitoring of both national and local government delivery of services. Rich country governments should deliver to the Summit ambitious plans with concrete timetables and deadlines to scale up aid efforts and improve its effectiveness according to the Accra Agenda of Action framework.
Messaging
- Our major messages during Stand Up will include: Breakthrough Action plans: We expect Heads of State of every country, rich and poor, to come to the MDG Review Summit with clear MDG Breakthrough Action Plans. These “Breakthrough Plans” should include approaches for scaling up and sustaining successful small scale strategies and approaches, explore innovative approaches to reaching the targets and design appropriate, relevant and specific strategies and interventions based on specific needs and circumstances. No more “business as usual” : it’s time for “business unusual.”
- Localising the MDGs: MDGs must be mainstreamed and integrated into local development plans; the capacities of local authorities must be enhanced to prioritise MDGs and increase access to information and engagement between citizens and local authorities.
- Accountability: These plans must incorporate a strong focus on addressing accountability of rich countries to poor countries (at the global level) and of governments to citizens (at the national and local levels), on the issue of MDGs for all. Citizens will be watching their governments and holding them accountable for their commitments over the next five years.
- Goal 8: Rich countries should deliver to the Summit ambitious plans with concrete timetables and deadlines to scale up aid efforts. Rich countries must fulfill their existing aid commitments, deliver the 0.7 percent of Gross National Income to aid that they have pledged and make sure it is in line with often-agreed aid effectiveness principles, such as the Accra Agenda. These plans should respect the policy space of poor countries and include accountability mechanisms for aid delivery, including tracking and mechanisms for corrective action. In addition, the Summit outcome should include a pro-poor breakthrough on the Doha trade talks.
- Inequality: The MDGs are for everybody. We will not accept inequality in any area - be it gender, spatial, ethnic (including the rights of indigenous people and lower castes) or in relation to persons with disability.
- MDGs Are Achievable: Much progress has been made in the last decade even in the poorest countries and most MDGs are still achievable in most countries, as long as policies and implementation mechanisms that are accountable to the poor are in place. In countries where governments have done the right thing, success has followed. If this expands and continues, there is no reason why these successes cannot be repeated over the next five years.
- 2010 is not the beginning of a “new and uncertain” voyage towards the MDGs: Rather, it is the “refueling" point on a voyage that has been ongoing for ten years - more than long enough to have seen that the MDGs work. The next five years are the final leg on that journey, what is needed is not a new set of plans, but implementation of clear plans to reach the originally-agreed destination by 2015, building on the learnings of the first decade.
- Power of the People: We as individuals acting together have the power to influence this process, but we must engage early and decisively to make this happen.





