Categories: World News

COVID-19 Hit UK Announces Plan To Slash Foreign Aid

A video grab from footage broadcast by the UK Parliament’s Parliamentary Recording Unit (PRU) shows Britain’s Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak as he delivers his autumn spending review during a hybrid, socially distanced session in the House of Commons in London on November 25, 2020. 
PRU / AFP

 

Britain’s government on Wednesday unveiled plans to slash the foreign aid budget to help mend its coronavirus-battered finances, defying calls from high-profile figures to protect the world’s poorest people.

Finance minister Rishi Sunak said he would no longer meet the government’s legally enshrined commitment to spend 0.7 percent of gross national income on the UK’s overseas aid, which came to 15 billion pounds ($20 billion) last year.

The intended cut to 0.5 percent of GNI, which is a broader measure than gross domestic product, would mean Britain is no longer the only G7 member to meet the target and contradicts promises made last week by Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab to protect aid.

Sunak told parliament that he had “listened respectfully” to vocal criticism of his plan “but at a time of unprecedented crisis, government must take tough choices”.

The aid budget would return to 0.7 percent of national income “when the fiscal situation allows”, he said.

The cut will deprive millions around the world of healthcare and education just as Britain takes over the G7 presidency and prepares to chair UN climate talks next year, according to campaigners, former prime ministers, and some mutinous Conservative MPs.

“Cutting the aid budget during a global pandemic is like closing fire stations during a heatwave,” said Patrick Watt, director of policy at Christian Aid.

“These are tough times and the government has tough decisions to make, but balancing the books on the backs of the poor isn’t the way to do it,” he added.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson last week announced Britain’s biggest programme of military investment since the end of the Cold War with extra spending of 16.5 billion pounds, as the country positions itself for a post-EU future.

But he pointed Wednesday to other UK spending on overseas assistance, including its involvement in research and future not-for-profit distribution of a vaccine against Covid-19.

“This country can be incredibly proud of what we have delivered for the poorest and neediest people in the world,” Johnson told parliament. “That will continue.”

– ‘Morally wrong’ –

The 2014 winners of the Nobel Peace Prize, Malala Yousafzai and Kailash Satyarthi, both spoke out ahead of the announcement, which was part of a broader budget review as Sunak tries to find savings after a year of gargantuan coronavirus spending.

Yousafzai, an education campaigner from Pakistan, tweeted that Britain and others must “prioritise education” as “Covid-19 could force 20 million more girls out of school”.

And five former prime ministers have now registered their opposition.

Among them was former Conservative leader John Major, who was quoted by The Times newspaper on Wednesday as saying the spending cut was “morally wrong and politically unwise”.

David Cameron, whose coalition government anchored the 0.7 percent target in law, said abandoning it would be a “moral, strategic and political mistake”.

Johnson’s government has repeatedly committed to maintaining the spending, and his Conservatives made it a plank of their election manifesto a year ago as they outlined a vision of “Global Britain” once it completes its Brexit divorce from the European Union.

The government also promised not to grab ring-fenced aid money when it merged the foreign and development ministries earlier this year.

The plan could face trouble when it comes up for a vote in the House of Commons, with opposition parties united against the cut and some leading Conservatives also voicing concern.

Former international development secretary Andrew Mitchell endorsed Sunak’s desire for fiscal rectitude.

But he told the PoliticsHome website that “tampering with 0.7 percent is the wrong thing to do, it’s not just a manifesto promise, it’s a promise to the poorest people in the world”.

“A 30 percent cut would effectively take a million girls out of school in the poorest parts of the world and lead to 100,000 avoidable deaths,” Mitchell said.

-AFP

Solomon Elusoji

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