Scottish Daily Mail

NOW END THE FOREIGN AID FARCE, BORIS

Millions more sent to space race nations than ever before as cash spent on salt reduction and yoga plans

- EXCLUSIVE By John Stevens Deputy Political Editor

BORIS Johnson was last night under pressure on foreign aid after funding for fast-growing China and India soared.

The nations, which are rich enough to mount missions to the Moon, received £151million between them last year.

UK taxes paid for schemes to cut dietary salt, send text alerts to problem drinkers and find whether yoga can halt diabetes.

The 12 per cent rise in spending on China and India flew in the face of vows to stop sending cash there.

The total foreign aid budget grew £493million from 2017 to hit £14.6billion last year, official figures show. Andrew Mitchell, a former internatio­nal developmen­t secretary, warned our money should go to the poorest and giving it to China had brought aid spending into ‘disrepute’.

Mr Johnson is committed to sticking to David Cameron’s target of directing 0.7 per

cent of national income abroad. however, he is thought to be considerin­g trying to get better value for money by letting the Foreign Office take over the Department for Internatio­nal Developmen­t (Dfid).

The figures show that the top recipients of UK aid in 2018 were Pakistan, which received £331million, ethiopia, which took £301million, and Nigeria, which got £297million.

Spending in China rose by £11.7million to reach £55.6million in 2018 and in India it went up by £4.9million to £95million. This is despite both countries embarking on active space programmes.

In January, China became the first country to land a robotic spacecraft on the far side of the Moon as part of its drive to become a leading power in space exploratio­n. It also wants to send astronauts to the Moon and is planning to launch a space station.

India spent £107.8million this summer launching lunar probe Chandrayaa­n-2. It even has its own foreign aid programme, which gave away £620million last year.

More than a fifth of the aid budget is now spent by Whitehall ministries other than Dfid. The Department for Business, energy and Industry Strategy spent £34.7million on China last year and sent another £29.6million to India.

The Foreign and Commonweal­th

Office was behind £14.4million of aid spending in China and £20.2million in India. When the Tories came into power almost a decade ago they announced that aid to China would stop because it was ‘not justifiabl­e’ to send millions to an economic superpower.

Dfid closed its funding programme in 2011, but aid cash has continued to be routed to the country by other Whitehall department­s. Dfid also ended the main aid programme for India at the end of 2015, but the spending has continued by other means.

Mr Mitchell said: ‘Spending hardearned taxpayers’ money in China, a country powering out of poverty and attaining superpower status brings Britain’s brilliant developmen­t work into disrepute. Care in what is financed should be taken by all department­s if reputation­al damage is to be avoided.

‘The British public support aid being used to save lives and tackle humanitari­an problems and disasters, they do not support this money being used in comparativ­ely wealthy countries, such as China.’

Tory MP Nigel evans, who sat on the Commons internatio­nal developmen­t committee in the last parliament, said: ‘China can well afford to spend its enormous wealth on educating its own people without the need to dip into the UK’s coffers.

‘There are so many people, especially children, around the world dying for need of food, clean water or medicines because of the poverty in their own countries and this is where aid should be targeted.’

Leading charities have warned that Mr Johnson’s plans for Dfid could lead to less money going to the world’s poorest. But the foreign aid budget has come under increasing scrutiny as vital services at home – such as social care and hospital casualty department­s – struggle.

Figures show that the UK provided £1 in every £8 of foreign aid handed out by 29 major countries last year.

It was the only G7 nation to hit the target of spending 0.7 per cent of national income and it gave more than double the 0.29 per cent G7 average. The US is the world’s largest aid donor in cash terms, but its £25.7billion contributi­on is just 0.14 per cent of national income.

The Organisati­on for economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t sets the rules on what can be counted as official developmen­t assistance.

Only five Developmen­t Assistance Committee member countries – Sweden, Luxembourg, Norway, Denmark and the UK – met or exceeded the 0.7 per cent target last year. The National Audit Office has said that a lack of transparen­cy in ministries other than Dfid raised uncertaint­y as to whether aid was being used effectivel­y.

A Government spokesman said: ‘Our developmen­t work with China and India, alongside our world-class defence and diplomacy, is crucial for addressing issues such as trade, climate change and human rights.’

 ??  ?? The Mail, January 2017 India boasts of satellite launch (as we hand them £70m of aid)
The Mail, January 2017 India boasts of satellite launch (as we hand them £70m of aid)

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