Is that what you can manage with all the googling ? So you call these credible links?
You are good person, tell me what would be more credible link then UNDP?
United Nations partnering India in reaching the Millennium Development Goals
http://www.undp.org.in/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=73&Itemid=157
Sails of Success
All 191 Member States of the UN have pledged to meet the eight Millennium Development Goals or MDGsadopted at the Millennium Summit in 2000.
Here you will find eight success stories in India that have moved the MDGs forward - towards Destination 2015.
Goal 1 : Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger
The problem of hunger persists in India with over 200 million people lacking access to enough food to meet their basic nutritional needs. Over 50% of the children in the country are malnourished and of those, about 20% are severely malnourished.
WFP assisted a self-help group in Jhabua, Madhya Pradesh, by forming a women's cooperative to produce the nutritional
supplement Indiamix. WFP, through Dutch Quality Improvement Fund, provided resources for machinery and equipment. Land was provided by the district administration. KRIBHCO facilitated the flow of technical assistance and organized visits for the women to othersimilar ventures managed by women. A private sector producer of Indiamix gave hands-on training. The district government provided wheat at subsidized rates and WFP came up with the initial working capital for raw materials.
The 500MT per annum roasting/grinding/blending unit at Jhabua produces Indiamix. The cost of the product was Rs.9 per kg, well within the state government's budget of Re 1 per child per day towards supplementary food for the Integrated Child Development scheme(ICDS).
The project enabled the empowerment of local tribal women by giving them a sustainable income generation activity. Thecooperative provides fortified supplementary food to the ICDS project in the womenâs own region. Today the cooperative does not receive ANY external assistance.
Goal 2 : Achieve universal primary education
Education is a fundamental human right and essential for sustainable human development. Since almost two-thirds of the world's 110 million children out of school are girls, ensuring their education is a top development priority. The Dakar Goal of Education for All urges nations to eliminate gender disparities and ensure that girls have full and equal access to basic education.
The Doosra Dashak project, supported by UNESCO, organizes skillsbased education for girls in residential camps. Peer education, through short training programmes, supports efforts to mobilize the community. In a matter of 18 months, Doosra Dashak has reached 91 villages in Rajasthan, and more than 1200 girls have received skillsbased training.
Meet Muravvat from Nure ki Burj village, Rajasthan. Her father, Laldin, drives a tractor in Orissa and spends most of the year away from home. Her mother works in a nearby salt mine. Once, after an illness, Muravvat's mother decided to stop sending her to school. But, Doosra Dashak's project officers convinced her to return the girl to the educational camp.
Today, pride is writ large on the faces of her family as Muravvat solves mathematical questions and reads confidently from a book.
Goal 3 : Promote gender equality and empower wowen
Violence against women disempowers women, devastates lives, fractures communities and hampers development. It has severe economic and human costs.
In India, socially debilitating customs and patriarchal mindsets curtail women's basic rights. Fear and shame prevent many women from speaking out against the declining sex ratio, foeticide, infanticide, domestic violence, dowry deaths, rape, sexual harassment, HIV/AIDS vulnerability Issues and trafficking in women and children.
The Touch initiative was a collective journey led by UNIFEM in association with the eminent artist Probir Gupta and students from 16 Delhi schools to highlight "Sixteen Days of Activism against Gender- Based Violence" in 2003. Art in diverse forms was used to sensitize, create awareness and raise consciousness about violence against women.
Touch dispelled myths that violence occurs only in poor households, that it is a 'family' matter and that the home is a safe haven. The initiative was an eye-opener; many students were inspired to educate others on the issue. For some, it was a lesson that would last a lifetime.
Goal 4 : Reduce child mortality
In India, 1.7 million infants die every year and an additional 1 million die before they reach their fifth birthday. More than 64% of infant deaths occur in their first month of life and a majority of them die in their first week. The main killers: asphyxia, premature birth, diarrhoea, pneumonia and other respiratory infections. Around 30% of newborn babies havelow birth weight and therefore face high risk of death.
The Government of India, with UNICEF support, is piloting the implementation of an adapted version of the Integrated Management of Neonatal and Childhood Illnesses (IMNCI) in one district each of Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Orissa, Rajasthan, and Tamil Nadu. The strategy is to simultaneously implement three-level interventions: assessing and treating children at community level with a referral mechanism; system support; and improving family and community practices. Health and ICDS personnel are empowered with skills to manage sick children in the community, and counsel and empower families for better child-care practices.
In Osmanabad, Maharashtra, around 150 health and ICDS workers and supervisors have been trained at two primary health centres(PHCs). A private nursing home has also joined forces with the public sector to manage referred cases. Enhanced skills of the health and anganwadi workers help in saving the lives of newborns.
According to the District Supervisor: "Until now we were only trying to find the reasons for infant deaths. Following IMNCI training we are now working towards saving their lives."
Goal 5 : Improve maternal health
Reduction of maternal mortality depends on the availability of skilled attendants at birth. Currently in India,only 42% of births are attended by skilled providers.
UNFPA's Averting Maternal Deaths and Disabilities (AMDD) project in India was implemented in seven districts of Rajasthan, from 2001 to 2003, within the national Integrated Population and Development Project. AMDD was supported by Columbia University with grants from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
On 17 May 2004, Nanudi (age 30) gave birth to her second daughter at home. She continued to bleed heavily after delivery, which alerted the local dai of the obstetric emergency and the need for urgent specialized care. She convinced Nanudi to travel to the Community Health Centre in Jhadol, 20 km away. Dr. Chandra Kumar who attended to Nanudi was trained under the AMDD project inemergency obstetric procedures and his newly acquired professional skills saved Nanudi's life.
AMDD project activities have resulted in an increase in the services being provided by the basic and comprehensive obstetric care institutions and in improved service quality. The project identified 52 basic and 31 comprehensive obstetric care institutions and provided infrastructure and equipment to them. Births at these Emergency Obstetric Care (EmoC) facilities increased from 41,944 at the time of needs assessment in 2000 to 49,502 by June 2003 and EmoC complications treated increased from 5,607 to 9,128. Maternalhealth has vastly improved due to the project.
Goal 6 : Combat HIV/AIDS malaria and other diseases
Tuberculosis (TB) is a major public health problem in India; each year over 1.8 million people contract TB and about 450,000 die from it.
In other words, 1,000 people die every day of TB! The HIV/AIDS epidemic in the country has further complicated this health problem.
The Government of India is implementing the WHO recommended DOTS strategy through the Revised National Tuberculosis Control Programme (RNTCP), funded mainly through a World Bank loan. ByMarch 2005, RNTCP had covered one billion people in 563 districts/ reporting units.
WHO is supporting RNTCP by providing technical assistance through a network of over 80 consultants who work closely with the district and state TB officers. At the central level, a National Professional Officer for TB and his team supports the Central TB Division of the Ministry of Health. WHO's technical assistance to RNTCP is supported through partnership with CIDA, DFID and USAID. Anti-TB drugs individually packed in boxes ensure an uninterrupted supply of drugs to each patient. Thousands of community volunteers supervise treatment adherence by patients.
RNTCP has achieved a treatment success rate of over 85% and an increasing trend in case detection reaching 69% in 2003. To accelerate case detection, RNTCP is also involving the public, private and corporate sectors, NGOs and medical colleges. The Government is committed to cover the entire country with RNTCP by 2005 and achieve the global targets of 70% case detection and 85% treat ment success.
Goal 7: Ensure environmental sustainability
Around 40 million households in rural areas do not have a safe source for drinking water, and over 100 million rural households live without access to sanitation facilities.
Increasing population, falling water tables, coupled with serious drought conditions, dramatically reduce the availability of water for domestic purposes, with dire consequences for health, nutrition and the overall development, especially of children.Between 2000 and 2002, several states witnessed drought. In Madhya Pradesh, drought affected more than 40 million people in 34 of the state's 48 districts. UNICEF supported the state government's efforts for immediate and long-term solutions. Local water committees were formed to plan, build and maintain structures that conserved both water and topsoil. Thousands of people worked to construct or renovate ponds, tanks, check dams and contour trenches. More than 3,500 water harvesting structures were built in as many villages,creating over six million person days of employment.
In village Titri in Ratlam District, the villagers contributed time and labour equivalent to more than half the cost of their project. The resulting water harvesting structures, together with the village-basedorganization which manages their operation and maintenance, decreased the community's future vulnerability to drought and improved their access to water for drinking and hygiene.
Goal 8 : Develop a global partnership for development
Partnerships are vital for achieving the MDGs. Success depends on the actions of both developing and developed countries, not just of governments but also of civil society. Also vital is cooperation with the private sector to address the issues of youth unemployment, ensure access to affordable essential drugs, and make available the benefits of new technologies.
Peer education and information technology are the main components of Project Outreach, a novel partnership initiative between UNDP, NIIT, India's largest IT training company and NIS Sparta, a private sector company. The project raises awareness of HIV/AIDS among NIIT students in the 15-25 age group and each peer educator is committed to creating 10 more peers among fellow students and friends, in the family and in the community.
The success of Project Outreach has prompted major government organizations such as the Indian Railways and Delhi Police as well as the corporate sector to seek out NIS Sparta for training their vast work force and to include an HIV/AIDS component in each of their programmes.