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Western Aid Declines, Financial Bailouts Mount
UNITED NATIONS - As the world's poorer nations warn about the gravity of the global financial crisis on their fragile economies, the United Nations has exposed the hypocrisy of Western donors who cry poverty even while they raise trillions of dollars to rescue their beleaguered financial institutions.
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has warned that the current financial meltdown should not be an excuse to slash development aid or marginalise developing nations, specifically the world's 49 least developed countries (LDCs) - ranging from Bhutan and Benin to Sierra Leone and Solomon Islands.
A child sits near his makeshift house underneath a toll road in Jakarta June 25, 2009. . The economy is the main battleground issue in Indonesia's presidential election campaign in a country where unemployment remains high and even small changes in prices of basic goods can trigger social unrest. Indonesia's presidential candidates are holding a series of televised debates ahead of the July 8 vote. Thursday's debate is on poverty and unemployment in Southeast Asia's biggest economy. REUTERS/Supri (INDONESIA POLITICS SOCIETY BUSINESS) The United Nations Millennium Campaign, which is battling to help eradicate extreme poverty and hunger worldwide, points out that since the inception of overseas development assistance almost 50 years ago, donor countries have given some 2.0 trillion dollars in aid.
And yet over the past year, 18 trillion dollars has been found globally to bail out banks and other financial institutions.
"The stark contrast between the money dispersed to the world's desperately poor after 49 years of painstaking summits and negotiations and the staggering sums found virtually overnight to bail out the creators of the global economic crisis makes it impossible for governments to any longer claim that the world can't find the money to help the 50,000 people who are dying of extreme poverty every day", says Salil Shetty, director of the Millennium Campaign.
The amount of total aid over the past 49 years represents just 11.0 percent of the money found for financial institutions in one year, he added.
Addressing the three-day U.N. summit on the global financial crisis Wednesday, the secretary-general reinforced the same argument.
The annual aid to the crisis-stricken continent of Africa, he said, was at least 20 billion dollars below the promises made by the leaders of the industrial world in Gleneagles, Scotland back in 2005.
"Surely, if the world can mobilise more than 18 trillion dollars to keep the financial sector afloat, it can find more than 18 billion dollars to keep commitments to Africa," Ban said.
But would it?
The challenge to the industrial world will come up once again at a summit meeting of the G8 countries - the United States, Britain, France, Italy, Germany, Japan, Canada and Russia - in L'Aquila, Italy Jul. 8-10.
"We need clear priorities," Ban told the U.N. summit. "That is why I have just sent a letter to G8 leaders urging concrete commitments and specific action to renew our resolve."
A 16-page outcome document, to be adopted by political leaders Friday, says the evolving crisis, which began within the world's major financial centres, has spread throughout the global economy, causing severe social, political and economic impacts.
"This crisis is negatively affecting all countries, particularly developing countries, and threatening the livelihoods, well-being and development opportunities of millions of people," the draft says.
The bottom line: millions of people all over the world are losing their jobs, their income, their savings and their homes.
The document specifically says that developing countries, "which did not cause the global economic and financial crisis, are nonetheless severely affected by it."
The Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) says the economic meltdown has resulted in 100 million more people going hungry, with the total number of the world's starving population reaching over one billion this year.
The World Bank projects a finance gap of up to 700 billion dollars, desperately needed by developing nations, with the possibility of a "lost generation", resulting in added deaths of 1.5 to 2.8 million infants by 2015.
Asked why rich countries keep ignoring the pleas of the world's poorer nations while they bail out banks and other financial institutions, Shetty of the U.N. Millennium Campaign told IPS: "The leaders in rich countries don't face any short-term political consequences by not acting on the needs and aspirations of poor people living in poor countries."
He said the only long-term solution is to build public support through sustained public education on these issues in rich countries.
"The decision-makers in rich countries don't see the same self-interest and mutuality as they now see in climate change, swine flu/pandemics, the so-called war against terror and to a lesser extent in trade on which the need for multilateral action has become painfully clear," he added.
Shetty pointed out they did realise the possible consequences in the case of Eastern Europe, where they live physically next to poor countries.
"They forget that there is less than 10 miles of water separating Europe from Africa," he noted.
Asked if developing nations, who are now part of G20, have a role to play in convincing their rich partners to respond to the call, Shetty said: "Yes, like climate change the growing economic importance particularly of China has certainly rebalanced the highly asymmetric power relations between rich and poor countries."
The members of the G20 are the finance ministers and central bank governors of 19 countries: Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, South Korea, Turkey, the United Kingdom and the United States of America, plus the European Union.
Shetty said: "The challenge we now face is to make sure that the BRICs (Brazil, India and China) themselves don't forget the 49 least developed countries (LDCs), as they bargain for a better deal for themselves with the richest countries."
"Otherwise, we could be back to the historic game of divide and rule," he stressed.
Shetty also said it is crucial that the emerging nations continue to place the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) at the forefront of their negotiations at the G8 in Italy in two weeks time and the G20 in September in the United States.



11 Comments so far
Show AllPuhleeze! How dare you bring up poverty and people dying of hunger and disease, and the greed of wealthy nations when we are mourning Michael Jackson. Are you complete, thoughtless barbarians?
Better to spend your time answering the important question about how many times Michael grabbed his crotch during live performances? Now that's important!
Yes, I understand your point, albeit not-so-funny sarcasm...
My plea to everyone: let's use our energy not merely on criticizing and in progressive forums (yes, I'm writing here, but this is rare), but rather on some type of action that will help to wake others up.
It's true - we have headlines all around the world today covering every facet of MJ's life & death. Buth what about the dozens and dozens of children who died over the last few hrs due to lack of basic food or resources? Why aren't they talked about in news headlines?
It's TIME TO MAKE EVERYONE AROUND US FEEL REALLY UNCOMFORTABLE! Tell them the truth. Make it hurt in their hearts. The greed has to END...NOW.
"All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing"
well i think that was was the point being made. but you just didn't get it......
Bailouts are to important a public issue to be left up to politicians and Wall Street lobbyists to decide. We need voter initiatives and referendums on this and all issues concerning public funding. http://ni4d.us/
Maybe the Whirled Bank can organize a summit to teach underdeveloped countries how to cope without western aid.
Any institution that would have Wolf-full-shits as their leider must have a big budget and a propensity to destroy rather than improve the lives of the underdeveloped world.
Aside from the elite and their expatirate advisors, nobody benefits from foreign aid - it just gets added to the totals owed by the recipient country.
The sad truth is capitalism would succeed if the elite and the foreign insitutions would back off and let the people make their own economic decisions.
Africans were fine before the Europeans showed up - the kingdoms of Ghana, Mali and Songhai put most of Europe to shame - then plague infested degenerates (from Europe) showed up and there went the neighborhood.
Get the UN out of the third world - eliminate the World bank and tell Hillary and the US to back off. And while you are at it - expose the Clinton Foundation for the fraudulent activities they are perpetuating in their global initiatives.
"...some type of action that will help to wake others up...".
Here is my contribution.
Welcome to the CABAL !
Read below and you will get a picture, which will be extremely hard to swallow, and very painful to digest: “Collateral Damage” by E. P Heidner, part I and II.
>>> www.scribd.com/people/documents/2169400-ep-heidner <<<
The two documents have just recently been published and are very well researched and referenced (over 400 footnotes). The articles are lengthy, some parts not easy to follow and to digest and they need to be read with an open mind. But they are well worth the effort. They provide the most distressing information (some reads like a thriller).
The implications will challenge how we look at politics, economy, history, finance, war and terrorism. Many persons in the documents are well known; many are right now in pivotal positions of politics and finance. These people do shape OUR life and that of our children right now. The details are stunning. The consequences are BEYOND BELIEF.
With respect, I don't buy into this paranoia - even if it is fact-based "objective paranoia", if I can use such a term.
Even if 911 was part of some giant manipulation, there's no logic that says it must be unstopable. Nor does is mean we are subject to what governmental powers impose.
The people (whose hearts are aflame) will, when backs are against the wall, stand up for what's needed in times of great crisis. WWII, Civil Rights movement, Women's rights, many others, and now....a swelling campaign for global justice and cooperation. It's happening. It's going to get louder and stronger.
People often have a hard time seeing both bad and good trends taking place, overlapping and occuring simultaneously. But it's not that hard to really pick out the positive trends taking place amid the atrocities of human rights violations from industrialized and developing countries.
The reason I'm optimistic is not based on any utopian, wishful thinking. It's very solidly a result of the fact that, unbeknownst to most people as yet, there are a group of very wise and unconditionally loving men of rare spiritual stature (not religious like most may assume, but rather evolved in the mental or conscious sense). None of us have seen them walking around in the open, but they're about to appear in public soon. They aren't going to rule or order us. They offer immensly powerful guidance and stimulus, both in a mental and heart-filled sense, should we choose to listen to these great ones. They're not your average human beings. You can read what they've taught since 1875 in a number of books. But here's a short intro to the Spiritual Hierarchy. All open-minded progressives should become familiar with them. They reveal and represent the highest of what lies not-too-far ahead for humanity's future.
http://www.transmissionmeditation.org/trans-spir.html
It’s not paranoia. It’s simply stating our history and the implications on reality as they are played out in front of us.
I never said or meant that the Cabal is not stoppable. However, we ARE subject to what government powers impose. And these powers are bought and manipulated by a cabal of Banksters, CIA, MIC and MSM.
I too do believe that, when backs are against the wall, people will stand up for what's needed in times of great crisis. It will be messy.
In the meantime I believe more awareness must be generated. This abominable chapter of history will fester until it is digested.
Before that will happen "it’s going to get louder and stronger" and sadly a whole lot worse.
I'm not sure about transmission meditation but, hey, it won't hurt. If there is a Divine Plan for this mess then He f***ed it up pretty good and is not to be trusted with more intervention.
The Clintons and the Bush families sold out our industrial base to China, and that behaviour has brought on a depression in this country that knows no end. Destroying this country did
not alliviate poverty in other countries, it created more
wealth for the Corporatists in this country that still have their fingers in the outsourced pie.
The Clinton Foundations should be investigaged and made public to all school children. The overeducated Ivy-League morons
need to take a course in Dedication to the country.
Former Alabama Governor George Wallace had it right,when he said,
the "Ivy League Pointy headed Liberals Cannot rade Bah-ca-cle.." in describing the Eastern establishment.
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, welcome to the false world of criminal economics, brought to you by milton turd fuck friedman, charles keating and his grand and glorious 'control fraud' show that after its beginnings in the 1980's S&L crises has now morphed into the grandest of larceny shows the UNIVERSE has ever seen, where those richies all have priority over all else, whose priorities have all been rescinded.
Yes, indeed, the S&L scandals were where this great 'control fraud' was tested out and since it worked so good it has been continued until forever so just sit back, kick you feet up and think 'UNFETTERED' forever and smile.
Not a soul on this planet has the balls to change it so we all accept it and live with it as the little peons we are, awaiting our sentence for even considering objecting to such insane thoughts of the fraud of the 'control' that once again would regulate and transparatize and supervise these 'best and brightest' that hate our and your guts and they can't stand to hear you take a breath or know our hearts beat.
I've tried to tell as many as I can that war has been declared on us but I think they believe it is a new spectator sport and are frantically trying to find it on their new HDTV's channels.
Hey global_commoner:
Maybe it's not ricg's sarcasm that you find unfunny, maybe, just maybe, it's you...
I thought his sarcasm was spot-on and damn funny!
FYI: You should learn to cherish sarcasm...it's a valuable tool that can break down barriers of resistance to teaching uncomfortable truths...
BTW: That group you alluded to is comprised of both genders; didn't you know that?