Calgary Herald

WHO IS HELPED BY CHARITY TRIPS?

Groups question value of mixing tourism, aid

- RYAN TUMILTY

OTTAWA • Part of WE Charity’s overseas trips allow people from North America to “step into the shoes of Maasai warriors” in Kenya, or “experience a shamanic ceremony and get hands-on weapons training” in Ecuador.

The trips, offered through WE’S for-profit arm ME to WE, cost over US$4,000.

This week, Finance Minister Bill Morneau announced he had reimbursed the charity $41,000 after failing to pay for hospitalit­y from WE for two trips that he and his family took two years ago.

But the sort of “voluntouri­sm” trips that WE and other charities run have been greeted with some skepticism in the not-for-profit sector.

Nicolas Moyer, president of the Canadian Council for Internatio­nal Co-operation (CCIC), an umbrella group for internatio­nal aid organizati­ons, said the risk of such trips is that they focus on the wrong people.

“There’s many risks that voluntouri­sm, if not set up properly, will focus primarily on the interests of the participan­ts, not on the community where they’re going.”

On the ME to WE website the trip to Ecuador, which aligns with what Morneau reimbursed, includes a jungle walk or canoe ride, work on a developmen­t project and a tour of an “agricultur­al learning centre,” where participan­ts learn to make their own chocolate.

It also includes nature walks, cooking lessons and the “shamanic ceremony” with hands-on weapons training. The Kenya trip includes many similar features along with trips to a giraffe centre, a safari and more weapons training.

Morneau said this week that his trip including helping to build a school in Ecuador.

The National Post asked WE if the Morneau family’s itinerary had been the same as these trips, but did not hear back before press time. Morneau’s office said his wife and one daughter went to Kenya with the organizati­on, while the minister, his wife and three children went to Ecuador.

On the ME to WE website advertisin­g the trips, ME to WE said they offer an opportunit­y to create lasting change in the communitie­s.

“Every ME to WE Trip takes place in a region where our renowned partner, WE Charity, works with communitie­s to implement holistic, sustainabl­e solutions with their over 20-year experience,” reads the website. “As a traveller, you’ll have the opportunit­y to create real change on the ground.”

The WE Charity website said it “supports community developmen­t in areas where there is a high incidence of child labour, exploitati­on of children and minimal opportunit­ies for the girl child.”

Moyer said he did not have first-hand knowledge of WE’S trips, but he was concerned about trips that mixed tourism with internatio­nal developmen­t.

“As head of a national associatio­n for internatio­nal developmen­t, I’m very concerned when these two issues get put together,” he said “It’s not to say they can’t be done well, but there’s a high risk that they’re not done well.”

Moyer said volunteers donating their time to help have been a major part of Canada’s efforts overseas across decades, but those were usually months-long commitment­s where Canadians brought a skill set not available in poorer parts of the world.

He said there were a lot of issues to consider when bringing over wealthy North Americans to poor countries for a feel-good trip.

“There are really strong intersecti­ons of issues of privilege, white saviour syndrome, colonial approaches, poverty porn,” he said.

WE is not a member of CCIC, which represents the Canadian arm of many major organizati­ons like World Vision, Oxfam, the Red Cross and Amnesty Internatio­nal. WE is a member of the Ontario Council for Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n and said they were not opposed to joining CCIC.

“There are many associatio­ns that bring value to charities and we have selected the OCIC as our primary associatio­n with respect to internatio­nal developmen­t at this time. We are certainly open to also joining the CCIC,” the charity said.

WE didn’t respond to several specific questions before press time, but did release a statement about why it asked Morneau and his wife to come on the trips.

“WE Charity extended the invitation to Nancy Mccain and Bill Morneau because they are well-known philanthro­pists with a history of significan­t donations to internatio­nal developmen­t programs.”

Morneau’s press secretary Maéva Proteau said the family was interested in attending as part of long-running philanthro­pic efforts in Africa.

“Before he ran for office, the minister’s family led the developmen­t of a girls school in Kakuma Refugee Camp in Kenya. And over the last three years they continued their efforts to help refugee students from Kenya continue their education here in Canada,” she said in an email.

WE has become embroiled in controvers­y after the Liberal government awarded it a contract to run a student volunteer program. The charity was to be paid as much as $43.5 million to run the $912-million program that would have given bursaries in exchange for volunteeri­ng.

Ministers are prohibited from accepting sponsored travel under ethics rules, Morneau said at committee he had covered $52,000 for airfare and hotels on the trip, but had not paid for his time at WE’S facilities. Proteau said the lack of payment was an oversight, which is why he paid for the costs this week.

WE isn’t the only charity to offer travel to parliament­arians. Under ethics rules, ministers and parliament­ary secretarie­s aren’t allowed to take sponsored travel, but backbench and opposition MPS are as long as they disclose the trips.

A review of recent years filings show charities like World Vision, Results Canada and the Canada Foodgrains bank have sponsored MPS from the Liberals and the opposition parties to travel on several occasions.

 ?? SHELLEY PAGE FILE PHOTO ?? Craig Kielburger walks with Maasai students who attend a Kenyan school that was built by Kielburger’s charity Free the Children.
SHELLEY PAGE FILE PHOTO Craig Kielburger walks with Maasai students who attend a Kenyan school that was built by Kielburger’s charity Free the Children.

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