EU Aid in the News

IPS - Recovery Could Leave Behind World's Poorest - By Selina Rust, 1/04/10 - The world's 49 least developed countries (LDCs), described as the poorest of the poor, could feel the effects of the global economic crisis for decades, a senior U.N. official warned this week.

Under-Secretary-General Cheick Sidi Diarra told IPS that if the international community does not live up to pledges made under Brussels Programme of Action nearly a decade ago, even the small gains made during 2000-2008 could be reversed.
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IPS - World's poor pawns in EU battle over diplomatic corps -

By David Cronin, 31/03/10: The world's poor appear to have become pawns in a political battle over the European Union's (EU) new diplomatic corps.Catherine Ashton, foreign policy chief for the 27-country bloc, is urging that responsibility for development aid should fall within the scope of the European External Action Service (EEAS) that she is in the process of establishing.

In recent statements, Ashton has argued that if the EU is to have a successful development policy, it must be compatible with its broader strategies on issues such as security.

Yet many observers of European politics suspect that the British baroness is more concerned with seizing control of a sizeable budget than in ensuring that development aid brings tangible benefits to the poor. At 15 billion dollars per year, development aid represents one of the top five areas of spending administered by the EU's executive arm, the European Commission.

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Pambazuka News: Eritrea - Alone against the world -

By Nikolaj Nielsen, 25/11/09, (Pambazuka News): Commenting on events at a Brussels conference for the promotion of peace and human rights in Eritrea, Nikolaj Nielsen reports on a country which Reporters Without Borders ranks lower on press freedom than North Korea. 'Eritrea', Nielsen writes, 'was the promise that never evolved' and a country 'unable to come to terms with lasting peace'.

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Election update: Mugabe has agreed to let AUN envoy into Zimbabwe Print E-mail

Newzimbabwe.com 060608: UNITED Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has gained Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe's permission to send a high-ranking UN envoy to help the nation try to hold a free and fair June 27 run-off election, UN officials said on Thursday.

Ban met with Mugabe on the sidelines of the UN food summit in Rome earlier this week and "highlighted the need to stop the violence and to deploy neutral international observers", UN deputy spokesperson Marie Okabe told AP.

While talking with Mugabe, Ban suggested sending Haile Menkerios, a Harvard-educated diplomat and former Eritrean ambassador, to Zimbabwe "to discuss ways of how the United Nations can help in the election process," Okabe said.

Mugabe agreed to Ban's request, she told the AP.

Ban now plans to send Menkerios, the UN assistant secretary-general for political affairs, to Zimbabwe within days, as soon as Menkerios obtains a visa.

The opposition and rights groups have accused Mugabe of orchestrating violence and intimidation in the run-up to the vote.

The 61-year-old Menkerios was appointed by Ban to the No. 2 political affairs job in May 2007.

He previously was deputy UN special representative in the Congo and directed one of the Africa divisions in the Department of Political Affairs.

In the 1990s, he represented the Eritrean government in varying roles as ambassador to the UN, to Ethiopia, to the Organisation of African Unity and as special envoy to Somalia and the Great Lakes region.

Menkerios would face a challenging situation in Zimbabwe, where opposition presidential candidate Morgan Tsvangirai placed first in the March elections and now faces a run-off with Mugabe.

US and British diplomats were attacked on Thursday while trying to investigate political violence in Zimbabwe and a US Embassy staffer was beaten, an embassy spokesperson said. The group was stopped at a roadblock just north of Harare.

Tsvangirai resumed campaigning on Thursday after spending nine hours in police detention on Wednesday, when he was stopped at a roadblock.

Tsvangirai only returned to Zimbabwe in late May to campaign. He had gone into self-imposed exile soon after the March 29 first election round, because his party said he was the target of a military assassination plot. He has survived at least three assassination attempts since 1997. - AP

 

Source: Newzimbabwe.com
 
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