UN Promoting Jobs, Peace in Post-Conflict Nations
New York, Nov 4 2009 4:10PM
The United Nations today launched a new policy aimed at creating employment and income generation in post-conflict situations, where they are vital for future stability, socio-economic growth and sustainable peace.
Led by the UN Development
Programme (http://www.undp.org/) and
the International Labour Organization (http://www.ilo.org/), the
UN Policy for Post-Conflict Employment Creation, Income
Generation and Reintegration will be carried out in five
initial countries emerging from conflict: Burundi, Côte
d’Ivoire, Nepal, Sierra Leone and
Timor-Leste.
“The end of conflict in a country
creates a window of opportunity for social and economic
reform,” notes José-Manuel Salazar-Xirinachs, Executive
Director of the ILO Employment Sector.
“Job
creation and self-employment opportunities provide to
communities and individuals the means for survival and
recovery,” he adds.
Mr. Salazar-Xirinachs says the
number of jobs that need to be created in post-crisis
settings is “staggering,” noting that in 2007 conflicts
around the world created more than 28.5 million internal
displaced persons (IDPs) and nearly 4.7 million refugees.
Programmes are also seeking to reintegrate over 1 million
ex-combatants.
The demobilization of Iraq’s military
left 350,000 former soldiers in need of jobs, while the
conflict in Afghanistan has resulted in at least 2 million
IDPs requiring reintegration and employment.
The new
policy gives special attention to the needs of
conflict-affected groups, particularly unemployed or
under-employed women and youth.
Creating employment
that taps into the positive energy and skills of young
people is a particularly difficult challenge, says Mr.
Salazar-Xirinachs, as these groups often find themselves
trapped in a vicious cycle of violence, poverty, illiteracy
and social exclusion.
The policy includes three
programming tracks: stabilization; return and reintegration;
and sustainable employment creation and decent
work.
It was developed jointly by 20 UN agencies and
international financial institutions that constitute
the Inter-Agency Working Group on Post-Conflict Employment
Creation and Reintegration, and follows a three-year
consultation and drafting
process.
ENDS