Naples – A United Nations official has called for the development of national urban policies to ensure developing countries are not overwhelmed by urbanisation, which he compared to a tsunami for its staggering growth which can surpass cities' capacities to manage it.

"What we are seeing now is a huge process of urbanisation in the South, which goes hand in hand with development,” said the Executive Director of UN-Habitat, Joan Clos at the opening of the 6th World Urban Forum here.

“You cannot have one without the other. The problem is that the institutional architecture cannot keep pace with urbanization.

"If there is no proper anticipation urbanization becomes a mess and if you try to correct the problem afterwards it costs a lot to fix.

“Countries are overwhelmed by urbanisation. It's like a tsunami. Urbanisation goes faster than the capacity to manage it," Mr. Clos said.

"We need to re-design our cities to face these challenges."

Mr. Clos stressed the importance of urban planning at national, state, and local levels to avoid informal settlements and slums, as well as high concentrations of people in mega capitals.

He stated that planning policies would help countries provide their citizens with jobs and prosperity while still tackling environmental challenges.

The World Urban Forum was established by the United Nations to examine one of the most pressing problems facing the world today: rapid urbanisation and its impact on communities, cities, economies, climate change and policies.

Organised jointly by UN-Habitat, the Italian government, the Campania Region and the city of Naples, the theme for this year's meeting, which is being attended by more than 3,000 participants, is The Urban Future.
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