The Mail on Sunday

. . . should boil your blood and make you rethink foreign aid, Mrs May

- By IAN BIRRELL

AID for despots and dictators. Aid for rich nations with their own aid agencies and others able to afford space programmes. Aid for North Korean officials and Somali jihadis. Aid that ends up in pockets of Palestinia­n killers, like the one who knifed British tourist Hannah Bladon to death in Jerusalem on Good Friday.

This newspaper has reported on all these cases and more. And our Prime Minister’s depressing response? The leader who likes to present herself as the epitome of common sense has decided to continue with the stupidest policy of recent years: the insistence that Britain must give away 0.7 per cent of national income in foreign aid.

Theresa May says the pledge will remain in place, squashing hope that the Tories might use the Election to ditch a damaging idea that so often does more harm than good. And as our poll reveals today, she makes that pledge at her peril.

Even as she spoke, her Chancellor hinted they might abandon another promise not to raise income tax, national insurance or VAT. This is the politics of the madhouse: borrow money and put up domestic taxes while doling out swelling sums on flawed projects abroad. Last year alone we sprayed more than £13 billion around the planet. How much more will be frittered away after another five years of May to hit a dubious and outdated target?

In case anyone doubted the reason for this policy, former Chancellor George Osborne popped up to tweet this was ‘key to creating modern compassion­ate conservati­ves’. Aid tends to be about the donor, not the recipient.

Once Osborne admitted privately the great British aid giveaway was to keep charities ‘off our back’. Certainly there was loud concern voiced last week from charities and global institutio­ns taking our funds as speculatio­n mounted the target might be abandoned.

No doubt May feels she needs to shore up her left flank as voters opposed to Brexit worry about her hardline stance on EU withdrawal. Yet constant revelation­s of waste will be a running sore during her time in office.

This self- serving political opportunis­m ignores mountains of evidence exposed by this paper of astonishin­g profligacy and corruption – the inevitable consequenc­e of prioritisi­ng spending over need.

As bills get bigger, growing sums get creamed off by fat-cat consultant­s earning millions, multilater­al bodies flying firstclass around the world, and charity chiefs on huge incomes.

May insists they will spend aid money in the most effective manner. Yet I have heard this weary mantra so often before from aid advocates and complacent politician­s: that lessons will be learned, that corruption will be tackled.

Action only ever gets taken after exposure by journalist­s. Nothing was done about those millionair­e consultant­s, f or example, until a series of articles in this newspaper culminatin­g in revelation­s of dirty tricks to win lucrative state deals by the biggest specialist contractor.

Suddenly there were parliament­ary probes, government inquiries and terminatio­n of deals. Yet still DFID treats whistleblo­wers with contempt while talking about transparen­cy and reeling off dodgy statistics it refuses to source.

Priti Patel, the Minister in charge of chucking away this cash, seems seduced by jetting around the world spending other people’s money. She claims ‘humanitari­an needs in 2017 are unpreceden­ted’. This is simply false: poverty is falling around the planet thanks to capitalism, consumeris­m and technology.

And she points to famine in South Sudan without acknowledg­ing the role Western funds played in aiding the gangsters and warlords whose fighting led to mass starvation.

What a shame to see Theresa May fall for this silly stunt. It is damaging for her reputation, dreadful for her party and, above all, disastrous in so many circumstan­ces for the poor people who suffer from this corrosive form of neo-colonialis­m.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom