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The government has revealed details of its plans to reduce foreign assistance, with support for children’s education and women’s health in Africa faces the most discounts.
The government said it would reduce foreign care costs by 40% in February – from 0.5% of gross national income to 0.3% – to increase defense costs to 2.5% after pressure from the United States.
The Foreign Affairs report and the impact assessment show that the largest redundancies this year will come to Africa, with less spent on women’s health and the sewage of water with increased risks, according to him, for illness and death.
Bond, the United Network of Assistance Organizations, said that women and children in the most marginalized communities will pay the highest price.
But the government said the costs of multilateral aid authorities – money given to international organizations such as the World Bank – will be protected, including the GAVI vaccine alliance, and she said the UK would also continue to play a key humanitarian role in hot spots such as Gaza, Ukraine and Sudan.
Baroness Chapman, Minister of Development, said: “Every pound should work more for taxpayers in the UK and the people we help around the world and these figures show how we start doing just that, having a clear focus and priorities.”
The government said the redundancies were following a “strategic review of the Minister’s assistance”, which focuses on “prioritization, efficiency, protection of planned humanitarian support and live contracts, while guaranteeing responsible programming when needed.”
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs said that bilateral support – the aid that goes directly to the land of the recipient – as some countries will decrease and multilateral organizations, which are considered to be a smoother, will face future redundancies. He has not yet announced which countries will be affected.
Bond said it was clear that the government “deprioritized the” funding “for education, gender and countries experiencing humanitarian crises such as South Sudan, Ethiopia and Somalia, and surprisingly occupied Palestinian territories and Sudan, which the government said would be secure.”
“It is concerned that bilateral funding for programs for Africa, gender, education and health programs will decrease,” said Bond Policy Gideon Rabinovitz.
“The most marginalized communities in the world, especially those who are experiencing conflicts and women and girls, will pay the highest price for these political elections.
“At a time when the United States has dug all gender programs, the United Kingdom must activate, not back down.”
Foreign assistance has been subjected to intense control in recent years, as a cabinet minister Public acceptance no longer supports the cost of thisS
An organization that fled the redundancies was the World Bank. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs has confirmed that the International Development Association (IDA), the World Bank Fund for countries with the largest income in the world, will receive 1.98 billion British pounds from the United Kingdom over the next three years, helping the organization benefit from 1.9 billion people.
Labor governments with Sir Tony Blair and Gordon Brown have committed themselves to increase the budget for help abroad to 0.7% of national income.
The goal was achieved in 2013 by the coalition government of David Cameron’s conservative-liberal democrats before being laid down in law in 2015.
However, the cost of assistance has been reduced to 0.5% of national income in 2021 in conservatives, blaming Covid’s economic pressure.