Western Mail

Aid budget will promote UK’s interests – Johnson

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BRITAIN’S aid budget will be pushed into projects that promote the country’s interests, Boris Johnson has said.

The Foreign Secretary said the money will be “more sensibly distribute­d” to support Britain’s policy goals rather than only helping the world’s poor.

His comments came as Internatio­nal Developmen­t Secretary Penny Mordaunt said the UK will provide a £21m boost to an emergency aid fund amid warnings 2018 could be “even bleaker” than the past 12 months.

Mr Johnson told the Sunday Times that the way the £13bn aid budget is spent is changing.

Cash will be diverted to places where it will support British efforts to deny safe havens to Islamist terrorists in Africa, Yemen and in refugee camps for Rohingya Muslims fleeing across the Burmese border into Bangladesh, the newspaper said.

“The old jam jars are being smashed,” Mr Johnson said.

“The cash will be more sensibly distribute­d with a view to supporting British foreign policy. You are going to see a lot of progress there on ODA (official developmen­t assistance) funding, supporting diplomatic activity in Africa, which is entirely sensible.”

The Government is committed to spending 0.7% of national income on ODA – but the target is unpopular among some on the right.

Mr Johnson said Brexit would give the UK more control over how aid funding currently handed to European Union projects is spent.

“We are 25% of EU aid spending. We’re a massive player in these things. In spite of our bulk and our overseas aid projection, we never got the influence in the (European) Commission that we needed,” he said.

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