Obviously
for Britain Ebola (and certainly some little country in Africa) is
not as important as bombing the shit out of Iraq.
Ebola
crisis: 'Britain has not abandoned Sierra Leone' – but cuts
bilateral aid by a fifth
Reductions
in the amount of money sent to help the government of Ebola-stricken
Sierra Leone are not damaging efforts to combat the virus, said
Justine Greening, as she insisted that Britain remained the country's
biggest ally
Photo: GETTY IMAGES
1
October, 2014
Justine
Greening, the international development secretary, has been forced to
deny that cuts in Britain's bilateral aid programme have hampered the
response to the Ebola epidemic.
Britain's
bilateral aid to Sierra Leone and Liberia – the money that is given
directly to the government – has been reduced by £14.5 million for
2014-15, compared to the previous year. The International Development
Committee on Thursday published its report into "Recovery and
development" in the two nations worst hit with Ebola, and said
the study, began in March, showed "the dangers of ignoring the
least developed countries in the world."
"The
spread of Ebola has demonstrated the importance that governments of
developing countries need to attach to health system strengthening,"
the report states. "The weak state of the health system in both
countries has greatly reduced the effectiveness of the response to
Ebola."
Five
people are currently being infected with Ebola every hour in Sierra
Leone, and over 600 people have died so far.
Liberia
is the worst-hit nation, with almost two-thirds of the 3,338 deaths
in West Africa.
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But
Ms Greening denied that there had been a cut in actual funding.
"The
UK is the largest financial donor to Sierra Leone and over the last
few years our aid programme has grown in size rather than reduce,"
she said.
Speaking
at a conference in London on Thursday which was called to raise money
to fight Ebola, she said that the total amount of money spent in
Sierra Leone was increasing – even though the direct, bilateral
funds from Britain were being cut. The money – £74 million for
2014-15 – was instead being given to NGOs and bodies such as the UN
to spend in the country, she said.
Last
year her department planned to spend £81m in the country, but only
delivered £68m of funding.
"And
I think you can see further support arriving to Sierra Leone in terms
of this £125 million package today. So I think there is no question
of support to Sierra Leone that is not only broad based and ongoing,
but when crisis hits we are prepared to scale it up significantly."
When
pressed on why Britain was switching from bilateral support to
funding multilateral programmes, she said: "It's important for
countries like Sierra Leone, like Nigeria and Liberia to have their
health systems strengthened, we've seen that today, and we see how
short sighted a view it would be to fail to help those countries
develop their health systems."
A
spokesman for DfID, the department for international development,
defended the decision, and said that Britain's response to the crisis
was "something to be proud of".
"I
think the important point is that multilateral spend, in some cases,
is most effective," she said. "Are we abandoning Sierra
Leone? Certainly not. In fact it is the total opposite."
But
Sir Malcolm Bruce, chair of the International Development Committee,
said DfID had given no explanation for the reduction of its bilateral
funding.
"The
point we were making is that the bilateral programme has been cut,"
he told The Telegraph.
"As
a Committee we recognise that some work must be done through
agencies. But DfID have not yet explained the benefits of this. What
was the case for cutting the programme of bilateral aid and diverting
it to multilateral? We need to prioritise further funding for health
programmes."
And
Sir Malcolm added that he was concerned that the £125 million,
pledged by Britain to help its former colony, must be used to create
a lasting legacy of health care, rather than spent on flying experts
in and then out.
"The
amount is a lot more than would normally be spent in the country,"
he said. "And I'd like to think that it will be used not only to
bring Ebola under control, but also to have a lasting impact on the
health of the country."
I couldn’t agree with Justine Greening more, we may be poor but a £14.5 million for 2014-15 cut in aid cannot be responsible for a drastic change of fortune for Sierra Leone. It's the government stupid and embezzlement with failed policies.
ReplyDeleteFor example, the government has lost more than $600 million in tax revenue to London Mining Company for extracting our mineral wealth - an amount that is far more than what the British government gave us in aid last year. With taxes from our mineral resources, if only investors can honor their tax obligations, Sierra Leone could be a better country than any others in the West African region.
Unfortunately, people like Tony Blair are impeding our development. He imposed predatory investors on our country to getting nothing in return for our mineral wealth. How can you expect a poor nation like Sierra Leone to develop when you have these types of investors? Tony Blair is now globetrotting for President Koroma in the name of his non-profit organization from which he collects a hefty income at our expense, is that what you call development?
Certainly it’s not a development; we need fair taxes for our resources not a hand out from the British government. This is one example of the failed policies our government has implemented in President Koroma’s desire to run our “Country as a business” enriching stockholders like Frank Timmis - running our country like no Sierra Leoneans business. The Tony Blair's, Frank Timmis with third party British Companies negotiating with our government on behalf of London Mining Company to lower their tax obligations only to ask for a cut in return from the same London Mining Company - depriving Sierra Leoneans needed resources – a Robin Hood type operation with predatory and Mafia type connection.