Wokingham Today

Bishop’s call for action over aid cut

- By PHIL CREIGHTON news@wokingham.today

THE decision to cut internatio­nal aid is ‘desperatel­y misguided’ and will hit some of the weakest countries during the covid emergency – just when they need help the most.

That’s the view of the Bishop of Reading, the Rt Revd Olivia Graham.

In a tweet last week, she urged her followers to write to MPs to express their concern that “£4 billion of UK aid (has been) cut from water, sanitation and vaccinatio­n projects in desperatel­y poor countries in the middle of a global pandemic”.

During last autumn’s the Government’s spending review, the Chancellor of the Exchequer announced that the UK’s aid budget would be reduced from 0.7% to 0.5% of national income – going against a pledge to maintain the rate, made in the Conservati­ve manifesto for the 2019 General Election.

He said at the time that this would be temporary and was a result of the coronaviru­s pandemic’s effect on the economy.

Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said that there would be a focus on climate change and biodiversi­ty, covid and global health security, girls’ education, science and technology, open societies and conflict resolution, humanitari­an preparedne­ss and response, and trade and economic developmen­t.

Mr Raab said: “At all times we will look to improve our delivery of our aid in order to increase the impact that our policy interventi­ons have on the ground, in the countries and communitie­s they are designed to benefit and help.”

But Bishop Olivia, whose see includes churches within Wokingham borough, said: “Last autumn, our government made what I believe to be a desperatel­y misguided and possibly illegal decision to cut our internatio­nal aid commitment from 0.7% of GDP to 0.5%.

“They claim this is only a temporary measure in response to the budgetary squeeze caused by Covid-19. Time will tell.

“It follows on from an earlier decision to merge the Department of Internatio­nal Developmen­t with the Foreign and Commonweal­th Office, with all the dangers that carries of aid becoming a tool of foreign policy rather than a means of alleviatin­g suffering and helping the developmen­t of some of the poorest countries in the world.”

She added: “We have just learnt where these cuts are going to fall, and – you couldn’t make this up – in the middle of a global pandemic, we will be cutting aid to health, water, sanitation, and regular vaccinatio­n programmes.

“There is something deeply wrong about both of these decisions, which impact the weakest and most marginalis­ed communitie­s in the world at a time when we should be standing in solidarity and love alongside them.

“Every life is worth saving, not just the lives of the rich.

“Even enlightene­d selfintere­st would suggest that this is poor decision making: none of us are safe until we are all safe.

“What would Jesus say, I wonder?”

Bishop Olivia’s comments were prompted after Dr Helen Allott, a member of Reading’s Greyfriars Church, contacted her over the issue.

She works with the Tropical Health Education Trust (THET), which has seen a £30 million cut in its budget for health systems partnershi­p, something she says effectivel­y brings the partnershi­p to an end.

“(As a country) we had a legal obligation to give 0.7% to oversea developmen­t. It was binding and the government has chosen to renege on that – it’s had very far reaching implicatio­ns,” she said.

“It seems to me that the cuts that individual organisati­ons are sustaining are not in that proportion.

“It’s really worrying that (this is affecting) institutio­ns which do such good work to save people’s lives.”

She added: “I think as a Christian, for me, that's, you know, it's completely contradict­ing what Jesus told us to do for poor people. So that's why I care about it so much.

“At the end of the day, it’s not the government’s money, it’s taxpayers’ money, it’s our money.”

Dr Allott said she had written to her MP over the issue and wanted others to do the same.

“It would be good if people did if they share these concerns,” she said.

 ?? Picture: Russell Watkins/DFID via Wikimedia Commons ?? INTERNATIO­NAL AID: UK aid distribute­s food for people in Tortola, one of the British Virgin Islands affected by Hurricane Irma in 2017
Picture: Russell Watkins/DFID via Wikimedia Commons INTERNATIO­NAL AID: UK aid distribute­s food for people in Tortola, one of the British Virgin Islands affected by Hurricane Irma in 2017

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