The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Canada won’t abandon millions of African famine victims, vows Harper

- BY FANNIE OLIVIER

SENEGAL — Prime Minister Stephen Harper, whose government’s approach to aid for Africa has been criticized in some quarters, reassured faminestri­cken residents of Africa on Thursday that Canada will not abandon them.

On the first full day of his trip to Africa, Harper committed $ 20 million in Canadian aid money to help people in the Sahel belt, a swath of land that stretches across the northern part of Africa and takes in several countries.

The $ 20 million covers a period of three years and is aimed at improving food distributi­on and farmland rehabilita­tion.

” Across the Sahel region of Africa, there are many problems, including millions of men, women and children who are suffering because they do not have enough to eat,” Harper said as he met with UN officials in the Senegalese capital of Dakar.

” I know I speak for all Canadians when I tell you we will not abandon you. The challenges we’re talking about today go well beyond the food shortage, but obviously for many people this is the most critical challenge.”

The Harper government has been criticized by aid groups for cutting the funding of the Canadian Internatio­nal Developmen­t Agency.

Internatio­nal Co- operation Minister Julian Fantino, who accompanie­d Harper on Thursday, said last month the agency’s budget had not been cut, even though it shrunk by several hundred millions of dollars in last April’s federal budget. A spokeswoma­n for Fantino said at the time that CIDA’s budget had actually been reduced but that the minister’s no- cut remark referred to ” humanitari­an assistance.”

CIDA spends about $ 70 million a year in Senegal, one of seven African countries targeted by Canada.

” Even in a good year, more than 230,000 children in the Sahel die every year from malnutriti­on or illness,” said Noel Tsekouras, who works for a UN humanitari­an aid group.

Thomas Yanga of the World Food Programme said more than 18 million people are affected by hunger in the Sahel region this year.

The group CARE says floods in Niger; a conflict in Mali that has forced several hundred thousands of people to move to Niger; a cholera outbreak in Niger; and a locust outbreak in different countries are just some of the obstacles people face in Africa.

Harper, who is on his third trip to Africa since becoming prime minister, will travel to the Democratic Republic of the Congo today for the summit of la Francophon­ie on the weekend. Earlier on Thursday, the prime minister visited a vocational training centre and announced Canada will contribute $ 5 million between 2012 and 2017 to improve employment opportunit­ies for young people in Senegal.

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 ?? CANADIAN PRESS PHOTO ?? Prime Minister Stephen Harper meets with representa­tives of Canadian companies active in the region Thursday in Dakar, Senegal.
CANADIAN PRESS PHOTO Prime Minister Stephen Harper meets with representa­tives of Canadian companies active in the region Thursday in Dakar, Senegal.

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