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Business Call to Action

More than 30 million rural poor in India and South Africa to benefit from banking services
 
New York, 14 December 2011—Two companies announced today they will be providing banking services to more than 30 million low-income people in India and South Africa by 2015 through their commitments to the Business Call to Action (BCtA), a global initiative that encourages private sector efforts to fight poverty, supported by several international organizations including the UN Development Programme (UNDP).
 
India-based Vortex Engineering is pioneering the dissemination of solar-powered cash machines tailored to rural communities’ needs, while South Africa’s WIZZIT Bank is expanding access to credit to help address a critical development issue: lack of access to finance and banking systems in poor communities.
 
“Lack of access to banking and credit impedes the economic empowerment of low-income individuals and hinders growth in the developing world,” said Susan Chaffin, BCtA’s Programme Manager. “We welcome Vortex and WIZZIT as they seek to scale up activities that not only represent a business opportunity but also have tremendous potential to positively impact low-income communities in India and South Africa.”
 
More than half of the adult population in South Africa and India lacks access to formal banking, in contrast to the Netherlands, for example, where the entire adult population has access to banking services, according to a World Bank study.
 
Vortex is linking up with local banks in India to address this gap by placing 10,000 solar-powered ATMs designed to withstand difficult weather conditions, erratic power supply, and lower literacy levels among cash dispenser users. The machines are expected to provide access to formal banking for 30 million people mostly in rural and semi-urban areas—many earning as little as US$1-4 a day—over the next four years.
 
Powered by solar energy, the cash dispensers consume 90 percent less energy than a conventional ATM, making them both affordable for poor communities and profitable for banks to employ.
 
“Lack of access to financial services can carry a high cost for the people who can least afford it, so delivering access to formal banking presents a significant economic opportunity for poor, rural communities,” said V. Vijay Babu, CEO of Vortex. “In partnership with banks and other stakeholders such as the Business Call to Action, Vortex can make financial inclusion a reality for millions of people.”
 
In South Africa, WIZZIT, a banking provider that offers low-cost customer accounts using cell phones for payments, transfers and purchases, have committed to provide personal loans to 10,000 people. More than 340 loans will go to small and medium size enterprises and nearly 3,000 loans to micro-entrepreneurs by 2015 through a new loan offering that will be available through mobile phones and WIZZIT’s agent network.
 
Since 2004, WIZZIT’s customers have been using mobile phones for making and receiving payments, along with a debit card which can also be used at ATMs and stores. The company is now expanding its range of services to allow users, who typically live far from bank branches, to access microloans and credit through their phones.
 
“The availability of credit can make the difference between success and failure, growth and stagnation for small, medium and micro-entrepreneurs,” said Charles Rowlinson, Chairman of Wizzit. “Small loans at affordable rates can be vitally important for low-income working families as well, who use them to pay for education, healthcare and other fundamental services.” 
 
For more information please contact:
BCtA: Lorin Kavanaugh-Ulku, This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it , Tel: +1 703-587-3219
 
Business Call to Action (BCtA) is a global initiative that seeks to challenge companies to develop inclusive business models that offer the potential for development impact along with commercial success. The initiative is the result of a partnership between the Australian Agency for International Development, the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency, the UK Department for International Development, the US Agency for International Development,  UNDP, the UN Global Compact, the Clinton Global Initiative, and the International Business Leaders Forum to meet the Millennium Development Goals by 2015. Companies report on progress toward commitments on an annual basis.
 
About WIZZIToffers a secure and efficient payment mechanism to the unbanked and under-banked people of South Africa, and has already taken its model with partner banks into 6 African Countries. The product offered is a low cost, transactional bank account that uses cell phones for making person-to-person payments, transfers and pre-paid purchases, and a Maestro debit card for making payments in the formal retail environment.
 
Vortex Engineering Pvt Ltd, a company headquartered at Chennai, aims to address the lack of access to formal financial services in poor and underserved communities by providing ATMs and associated technologies for rural/semi-urban areas. Vortex is the pioneer and leading provider of innovative low power consuming ATMs specially designed for this segment. Built on years of R&D in collaboration with IIT Madras, and with a focus on rural needs, Vortex is now changing the face of banking with its Gramateller ATMs.
 

 

 

Climate change awareness growing

Durban – There is growing momentum amongst rich and developing nations to take action against global warming and climate change, UN climate head Christiana Figueres said on Sunday.  Figueres was speaking to reporters at the Durban International Convention Centre ahead of the 17th Conference of Parties (COP 17) which starts on Monday.
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UN collaboration to South Africa

Cape Town, 8 February, 2011.-  The United Nations Country Team will held its annual retreat on 8th – 9th February 2011, at Devon Valley, in  Stellenbosch.  This was an occasion to reflect on the performance of the UN System in South Africa, its programmes and lessons learnt as it plans the work for 2011.

The key objectives of the retreat were to review and refocus the development partnership between UN and Government of South Africa South Africa, to take stock and re-examine the programming instruments from the UNDAF & Cluster Work-plans 2010 & 2011 in order to sharpen these tools for enhanced relevance of UN in South Africa and to enhanced understanding of the “Delivering as One UN” framework, and its application through emerging challenges and opportunities in South Africa.
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Nelson Mandela Day

Mandela Day is an annual celebration of Nelson Mandela’s life and a global call to action for people to recognise their individual power to make an imprint and change the world around them.

 

 

 

A global movement for positive change begins with small actions. As each person acts, they fuel momentum toward positive change, raising awareness and expanding the reach of Mr Mandela’s values – fighting injustice, helping people in need and practicing reconciliation. In his State of the Nation Address on 3 June 2009, President Jacob Zuma said:
"An international campaign has been initiated by the Nelson Mandela Foundation and related organisations, called Mandela Day, which sums up what Tata stands for. Mandela Day will be celebrated on the 18th of July each year. It will give people in South Africa and all over the world the opportunity to do something good to help others. Madiba was politically active for 67 years, and on Mandela Day people all over the world, in the workplace, at home and in schools, will be called upon to spend at least 67 minutes of their time doing something useful within their communities, especially among the less fortunate. Let us wholeheartedly support Mandela Day and encourage the world to join us in this wonderful campaign. "
 
Cabinet on 1 July 2009 endorsed the call to declare 18 July as global Mandela Day. Cabinet calls on all South Africans, civil society organisations and the citizens of the world to support the Mandela Day initiative by doing good in their communities.

 

 

Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon inaugurates world's first anti-corruption academy

Vienna, December 14 2010 - Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon inaugurated the International Anti-Corruption Academy in Vienna. Addressing the inaugural conference, Mr. Ban said: "The launch of the International Anti-Corruption Academy is a milestone in the efforts of the international community to fight corruption.  It has great potential to advance the goals of the landmark United Nations Convention against Corruption."

Mr. Ban added that while too often in the past corruption was perceived as a fact of life, today attitudes are changing. "Across the world, intolerance of corruption is growing. The establishment of this Academy responds not only to this increasing sense of outrage and injustice, but also to an urgent need to train the experts we need to conquer this global menace."  Noting that traditional methods are proving no match for new types of corruption, especially financial crimes, Mr. Ban said that the Academy will nurture a new generation of leaders in the public and private sectors - a global network of talented, like-minded professionals; while its curriculum and activities will complement the technical assistance provided in those areas by the UNODC, guardian of the Convention.
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