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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Voices from Africa on Obama's victory (6 November 2008) Print E-mail

"The Obama victory, after a hard fought two year campaign is sweet enough, but there is no indication of triumphalism in Obama's camp. The road ahead is full of hurdles and the tasks on hand are enormously huge. No one knows these better than Obama, and his entry to the halls of power in Washington is measured and sober.

 For me personally, there are three priorities among the many issues and promises that the Obama administration has to tackle.  In a sense the yardstick by which we can measure progress towards real Change is the movement to end the war in Iraq, the closure of the anomaly called, Guantanamo and the process of continuing to engage the whole new crop of young voters in the political process.

 Obama has taken on the presidency at a time when America is most challenged, but he is the man of the hour, and I believe he is up to the tasks ahead."

 Kassahun Checole, Director Africa World Press


How fortunate we are to see Mandela free
and Obama take the lead

So marvellous, our times, to be heralding hope
against all the no no and nopes.

Today i know for sure
change there will be for more

And while we misery endure
this is not the time to be demure

sing, laugh, giggle
even make a wiggle

Obama, Madiba and all who are next
I have no doubt that we are very blessed

Isabella Matambanadzo, Zimbabwean activist, Oxford, 5 November 2008


"My wish and dream is that we have someone like Barack in Eritrea one day. A President who gives hope to the youth instead of chasing them out of their own country."

An Eritrean activist with US citizenship


"We hope and pray that our beloved homeland, Eritrea, will also have the opportunity to vote. But we have to fight the good fight! As Barack kept saying, parapharising Frederick Douglas, "power gives nothing without a demand"

An Eritrean activist with US citizenship

 
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