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 Britain's Blair wants more aid for Africa
    Peter Fabricius
    November 15 2004 at 02:36PM
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British Prime Minister Tony Blair's Commission for Africa is proposing that wealthy nations double their annual development aid to Africa in the next few years.

The commission says drastic measures are needed if Africa is to have any chance of meeting the Millennium Development Goals.

On Monday the commission - which includes SA finance minister Trevor Manuel - begins intensive talks with African businesses, NGOs and the public on a consultation document drawn up by the commission in Addis Ababa earlier in November.

The Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) are a series of targets to halve poverty by 2015. Africa is the only region lagging behind.
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Consultations on the document will form the basis for a report due out early in 2005 which Blair intends to push when he chairs the G8 and the European Union.

Sir Nicholas Stern, the commission's director for policy research is in South Africa for meetings with Manuel and with Professor Wiseman Nkuhlu, the chairperson of the secretariat of the New Partnership for Africa's Development (Nepad).

The main goal of the commission is to give impetus to Nepad and to the G8 Africa Action to advance Nepad's goals.

Stern told journalists in Pretoria on Sunday that it would take just $20-billion (R120-billion) for the wealthy nations to double their annual development aid to Africa.

That would require just .07 percent more from their gross domestic products. (GDPs)
The world's largest economy, the United States, could pay the $20-billion (R120-billion) with just 0.2 percent of its GDP.

The report endorses British Chancellor Gordon Brown's proposal to front-load financial assistance to Africa through a financing facility which will raise funds now on capital markets on the surety of future development assistance.


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