UN Urges Lawmakers in 32 Landlocked Nations to Deliver on Development Plan for 600 Million People

أغسطس 5, 2025
11:25 ص
In This Article

Key Impact Points:

  • 32 landlocked countries host 7% of the world’s population but generate just 1% of global GDP.
  • Trade costs are 30% higher than in coastal states; only 61% have electricity and fewer than 40% have internet access.
  • UN urges parliaments to align laws, budgets, and governance with the Awaza Programme of Action to close the gap.

Political Will Meets Legislative Action

At Monday’s Parliamentary Forum of the Third UN Conference on Landlocked Developing Countries (LLDCs), senior UN leaders stressed that without national legislative follow-through, a new decade-long development plan will fail to deliver.

“There are 32 such countries globally, home to over half a billion people,” said H.E. Ms. Rabab Fatima, High Representative for the Least Developed Countries, Landlocked Developing Countries and Small Island Developing States, UN-OHRLLS. “They stem not just from being landlocked but from limited infrastructure, narrow export bases, and lack of access to finance.”

Rabab Fatima, High Representative for the most vulnerable countries
H.E. Ms. Rabab Fatima, High Representative for the Least Developed Countries, Landlocked Developing Countries and Small Island Developing States, UN-OHRLLS

She noted LLDCs face deep structural disadvantages: 30% higher trade costs than coastal states, electricity access for just 61% of citizens (compared to 92% globally), and internet access for fewer than 40%.

“These are not just statistics. They reflect real human challenges,” she said.

Awaza Programme of Action: Roadmap for Change

H.E. Ms. Fatima called the Awaza Programme of Action “a milestone” to turn structural barriers into opportunities, but stressed that delivery depends on lawmakers.

“Parliaments have a decisive role,” she urged. “You are lawmakers, you are budget-makers — and champions of change. Your leadership is essential to ensure that the Awaza Programme delivers tangible and lasting results for the 600 million people of LLDCs.”

She called on MPs to align national strategies with the programme, secure financing, promote trade, support governance reforms, and establish dedicated parliamentary groups for implementation.

Parliament as a Bridge to Progress

UN General Assembly President Philémon Yang echoed the call, noting that “parliaments are essential to translating global commitments into measurable national progress.”

He said parliaments create the legal framework for infrastructure, innovation, and trade, while controlling funding for education, healthcare, and climate action. Yang also cited the International Court of Justice’s July 2025 ruling affirming climate action as a legal duty of all states.

“Parliaments monitor government performance and ensure the efficient use of public funds,” he said. “Beyond policy and budgets, they are the bridge between the State and citizens.”

Call for Stronger Cooperation

Yang urged stronger inter-parliamentary cooperation to tackle LLDC-specific challenges. “Let us strengthen this partnership between national parliaments and our global institutions,” he said, “so that we can deliver on the promise of sustainable development — a promise grounded in peace, prosperity, and dignity for everyone, everywhere.”

Related Content: Unlocking Opportunities: Sustainable Industrialization in LLDCs – Gerd Müller

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