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Maria Named UNDP
Ambassador
NEW YORK, NY, USA - At a ceremony on Wednesday, February 14 at United Nations
headquarters, world No.1 Maria Sharapova was appointed a Goodwill Ambassador
for the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP). At the same time, she
announced a donation of $100,000 to UNDP Chernobyl-recovery projects.
"UNDP works around the world making a positive difference in people's lives,
and I am proud to add my personal commitment to its work," said Sharapova, who
will serve in her new role to rally support for the global campaign against
poverty. "UNDP's efforts in the fight against poverty are crucial for young
people everywhere to achieve their potential. I am looking forward to working
with UNDP."
Sharapova's
work with UNDP will include promoting international efforts to achieve the
Millennium Development Goals. Adopted by 189 countries in 2000, the Goals are
clear, time-bound targets for achieving measurable improvements in the lives
of the world's poorest people. They aim at eradicating poverty, putting
children in schools, promoting women's rights, fighting killer diseases, and
providing access to safe drinking water. UNDP is working to help countries
around the world achieve these goals by 2015.
"UNDP is very proud to welcome Ms. Sharapova as our Goodwill Ambassador," said
Ad Melkert, UNDP's Associate Administrator and UN's Under-Secretary-General.
"She is a role model for young people who face challenging conditions in life.
She is already building on her success as a top athlete to create concrete
opportunities for disadvantaged young people to improve their lives."
At
the ceremony, Sharapova announced a $100,000 contribution to eight
youth-oriented projects in rural communities in Belarus, the Russian
Federation and Ukraine that still suffer the after-effects of the Chernobyl
disaster of 1986.
Sharapova's donation from the newly created Maria Sharapova Foundation will
fund projects aimed at improving computer access, promoting ecological
awareness, and restoring sports facilities and hospitals in the three
countries most affected by Chernobyl. These projects complement a broad
portfolio of UN work helping Chernobyl-affected communities regain a sense of
self-sufficiency, build new livelihoods, and bring a once-blighted region back
to life.
"My first step is to focus on the Chernobyl-affected region, where my family
has roots," said Sharapova. "Today, it is poverty and lack of opportunities
that pose the greatest threat for young people in the Chernobyl region."
"UNDP is especially pleased that Ms. Sharapova is targeting a region that is
often overlooked by donors," concluded Melkert. "We know that community
recovery projects of the sort that she has targeted for her generous donation
hold great promise."
Sharapova joins an elite group of UNDP Goodwill Ambassadors, which includes
soccer stars Ronaldo of Brazil, Zinédine Zidane of France; newly appointed
Didier Drogba of Cote d'Ivoire; Japanese actress Misako Konno; and Crown
Prince Haakon Magnus of Norway.
Sharapova was born on April 19, 1987 in Nyagan, Siberia, after her family fled
the city of Gomel in Belarus in the wake of the Chernobyl accident. The family
lived in Nyagan for two years and then moved to the Black Sea town of Sochi.
In 1995, Sharapova left Russia and became a full-time student at IMG's Nick
Bolletieri Tennis Academy. She made her first Sony Ericsson WTA Tour
tournament appearance in 2002. In 2004 she won her first Grand Slam title at
Wimbledon and was named the Tour's Player of the Year. In 2006 she won the US
Open. She is currently ranked No.1 in the world.