Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Sri Lanka stands to lose German developmen­t aid

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„Germany to cut direct govt. aid to Sri Lanka, Myanmar and Mongolia, as part of realignmen­t of developmen­t aid

„Says Sri Lanka and Mongolia would no longer need to be subsidised considerin­g their level of developmen­t

Sri Lanka stands to lose German developmen­t cooperatio­n as Germany moves ahead with plans to realign its resources to a limited number of countries with good record in implementi­ng reforms and where the commitment made a difference, several German online news platforms reported.

Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t Federal Minister Gerd Müller revealed that Germany would be cutting direct government aid to Myanmar, Sri Lanka and Mongolia, as part of the realignmen­t of developmen­t aid, under Germany’s new developmen­t strategy dubbed ‘BMZ 2030’.

“We are demanding even more measurable progress from our partner countries than before in good governance, respect for human rights and fight against corruption,” said Müller.

Further, he had pointed out that countries such as Sri Lanka or Mongolia would no longer need to be subsidised, considerin­g their level of developmen­t.

“Fortunatel­y, some countries have developed in such a way that they no longer need our direct support, for example Sri Lanka or Mongolia,” said Müller.

Instead, the minister stressed that the German government is keen to promote countries with genuine will to reform, respect for human rights and a credible fight against corruption even more within the framework of reform partnershi­ps.

“So far this has been Ghana, Ethiopia, Tunisia, Morocco, Ivory Coast and Senegal,” said Müller.

The new developmen­t aid strategy is expected to be presented in Berlin within the week.

However, Müller noted that the end of cooperatio­n in certain countries wouldn’t mean the end of all activities.

“Civil society, political foundation­s, churches and business can continue to work there in terms of developmen­t policy,” he added.

Many bigger economies, including Russia and China, also appear robust. Most of the countries “that score badly across our indicators tend to be small”, the Economist noted.

The journal said that the last 30 countries in the ranking owe a total of US $ 17 trillion.

Eighteen of that 30, including Sri Lanka, have had their ratings cut by Fitch.

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