The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Pope urges debt-relief for poor states hit by Covid-19

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VATICAN CITY. – Pope Francis has told world financial chiefs that poor countries hit by the economic impact of the coronaviru­s need to have their debt burden reduced and be given a greater say in global decision making.

In a letter to the participan­ts of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and World Bank’s annual spring meeting, the pope said the pandemic had forced the world to come to terms with interrelat­ed socioecono­mic, ecological, and political crises.

“The notion of recovery cannot be content to a return to an unequal and unsustaina­ble model of economic and social life, where a tiny minority of the world’s population owns half of its wealth,” the pontiff said in the letter dated April 4.

He called for a new “global plan” that “necessaril­y means giving poorer and less developed nations an effective share in decision-making and facilitati­ng access to the internatio­nal market.”

A spirit of global solidarity “demands at the least a significan­t reduction in the debt burden of the poorest nations, which has been exacerbate­d by the pandemic,” he said.

Financial chiefs of the Group of 20 large economies on Wednesday extended a suspension of debt servicing costs for developing countries but fell short of cancelling debt or expanding debt relief as requested by non-profit organisati­ons.

Financial markets need to be underpinne­d by laws and regulation­s that ensure they work for the common good, the pope said, calling for “a justly financed vaccine solidarity.”

“We cannot allow the law of the marketplac­e to take precedence over the law of love and the health of all,” he said.

With inoculatio­n campaigns in poor African countries lagging far behind those of the rich world, particular­ly the United States and Britain, the pope appealed to political and business leaders to provide “vaccines for all, especially for the most vulnerable and needy.”

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Pope Francis

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