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Focus on world's poor at General Assembly
(AP)
Updated: 2005-09-19 19:25

On Saturday night, Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf addressed the American Jewish Congress, saying his country could establish full diplomatic ties with Israel if it grants Palestinian statehood. He got a standing ovation, further evidence of thawing relations between Israel and the Arab world after the Israelis ended their 38-year Gaza occupation.

Underlying many global problems is the widening gap between rich and poor in many parts of the world — and the inability of the poorest to escape the poverty trap.

The 2005 U.N. Human Development Report, released Sept. 7, said more than 1 billion people still survive on less than $1 a day, and 2.5 billion live on less than $2 a day — about 40 percent of the world's 6.2 billion population.

The 35-page document adopted Friday by world leaders dropped a call for countries that haven't done so — including the United States — "to make concrete efforts" to earmark 0.7 percent of their gross domestic product to development assistance.

"Our second millennium faces the reality of growing poverty in two-thirds of the planet," Ecuador's President Alfredo Palacio said Sunday. "Entire nations are condemned to wander as disinherited immigrants, mortal illnesses hover over humanity, and terrorism lurks."


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