Secretary of State for International Development, Hilary Benn: Gleneagles
progress by December 2006
30 January 2007
Gleneagles Implementation Plan for
Africa - December 2006 update
The Secretary of State for International Development (Mr. Hilary Benn):
I have placed in the Libraries of both Houses copies of the December Update
of the G8 Gleneagles Implementation Plan for Africa. This plan is updated
monthly by the Department for International Development (DFID) on behalf of all
departments.
A year ago, the Government set out eleven objectives that we hoped would be
achieved by the end of 2006 (Annex 1- Box 1). I am pleased to report that the
majority of these have been met, although more progress is needed on the Africa
Standby Force and donor support for 10 year education plans and significant
progress is needed on trade.
Effective international monitoring mechanisms have been put in place. G8
Leaders reviewed progress at the 2006 Summit and will do so again at the 2007
Summit in Germany. The Africa Partnership Forum produced its first three
progress reports in October 2006, with four more expected in May 2007.
The civil
society ‘African Monitor’ is gaining momentum. The UK has helped create the
Africa Progress Panel, to be chaired by Kofi Annan, to complement these other
mechanisms.
Global aid rose 32% in 2005 to US$106.8 billion – a record high. Preliminary
aid figures for 2006 will be available from the Organisation for Economic
Cooperation and Development (OECD) in April 2007, with the EU
publishing a progress report for Member States in May.
Aid levels may fall back
in 2006 and 2007 as debt relief declines, but the UK will continue to press
donors to meet their 2005 pledges so we meet the overall target to increase
global aid by $50 billion by 2010. The UK is on track to meet its target to
provide 0.7% of national income as aid by 2013. Future spending projections are
being finalised as part of the Comprehensive Spending Review.
The first bonds for the International Finance Facility for Immunisation (IFFIm)
were released in November 2006, raising $1 billion. In total, the IFFIm will
raise $4 billion, and these additional resources should save over 10 million
lives including 5 million children before 2015.
The World Bank, International Monetary Fund and African Development Fund have
implemented the Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative (MDRI) agreed at Gleneagles.
Twenty-one countries (seventeen African) have reached ‘Completion Point’ and had
debts worth $36 billion cancelled under the MDRI.
The UN Peacebuilding Commission has been established and begun work on
Burundi and Sierra Leone. The African Union is making progress towards its
objective of a fully operational African Standby Force (ASF) by 2010. The ASF
has around 15,000 troops pledged, Brigade Headquarters have been established and
are manned in three regions. But faster progress is needed on this.
The UN Convention Against Corruption has entered into force and international
agreement been reached on mechanisms for implementing and monitoring it, for
tackling international asset recovery and coordinating technical assistance.
Twenty-six countries have signed up to implement the Extractive Industries
Transparency Initiative.
Three countries (Ghana, Kenya and Rwanda) have
completed the Africa Peer Review Mechanism review process and are beginning to
implement recommendations. South Africa and Algeria should be peer reviewed in
2007. We would like to see more countries with self-assessments underway.
The launch of a major new education initiative at the Financing for
Development conference in Nigeria in May 2006, and the UK’s pledge to provide
£8.5 billion for education over the next 10 years, have helped to stimulate
twenty-five African countries to begin work on long-term education plans.
The
Education Fast Track Initiative (FTI) is being expanded to sixty countries.
Twenty-eight countries have FTI endorsed education sector plans. Three further
plans are likely to be approved in early 2007 with a further fifteen likely by
end of 2007. A conference – to be convened by the EU and the World Bank in the
spring – will encourage donors to make long-term commitment to fund these plans.
Back to top
Supported by the UK, Zambia has now introduced a policy to remove formal user
fees for health, with discussions underway elsewhere (e.g. Burundi). A group led
by World Bank, World Health Organisation, the Netherlands and the UK is tackling
access to health services, by trying to improve coordination amongst donors,
efficiency and resource availability.
The UK issued a global call for action on water and sanitation – linked to
the 2006 UN Development Programme Human Development Report, which highlighted
the urgency of the challenge and action the international community should take
to meet this.
Alongside this, the UK has increased its own efforts: DFID is
focusing on twelve African countries, with Ethiopia, Nigeria, Sudan and the
Democratic Republic of Congo identified as top priorities.
The number of people receiving AIDS treatment in low and middle income
countries rose from 400,000 to 1.6 million between 2003 and 2006, rising tenfold
in sub-Saharan African alone to around 1 million. This represents around a
quarter of those in need, so there is a long way still to go.
Treatment has
prevented around 250,000-300,000 premature deaths in developing countries in
2005. The international focus is firmly on achieving universal access to
comprehensive prevention programmes, treatment, care and support by 2010.
The UK
is providing substantial funding, both for new initiatives like the
International Drug Purchase Facility (UNITAID) and increasing its contributions
to organisations like the Global Fund to fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria (GFATM) and
the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV and AIDS (UNAIDS).
The EU is developing an Action Plan on Recruitment of Health Workers to
address training and retention, to strengthen developing country health services
and to ensure EU Member States’ recruitment policies do not adversely affect
developing country health services.
This should be finalised shortly. The new
Secretariat of the Global Health Workforce Initiative is helping countries and
regional institutions such as the African Union in areas like human resource
planning and lesson-learning across countries.
Important changes have been made to the international humanitarian system, to
increase its ability to prevent and to respond to emergencies. The new Central
Emergency Response Fund (CERF) has already demonstrated its value as a source of
rapid-response funds for ‘neglected’ humanitarian crises such as in Timor-Leste
where in April and May 2006 more than 135,000 became displaced overnight
following the outbreak of fighting.
The UN Humanitarian Coordinator (HC) system
has being strengthened, with a new Secretariat focused on training and
deployment. Twenty-one experienced Coordinators have been trained, providing a
pool to respond to crises, most recently in Lebanon. The ‘Cluster Approach’ has
increased coordination amongst agencies.
A joint World Bank/DFID programme is
supporting integration of Disaster Risk Reduction measures into development
strategies, focusing on particularly vulnerable countries (including Malawi and
Mozambique). Reform of the UN International Strategy for Disaster Reduction is
gaining momentum.
DFID is supporting this, alongside other initiatives like the
Pan-American Health Organisation’s programme for emergency preparedness and
disaster relief and the ProVention Consortium of international donors on
Disaster Risk Reduction.
The one area where progress has been very disappointing is trade. Informal
talks on ‘Doha’ Round of World Trade Organisation negotiations restarted in late
2006. The UK Government continues to push for early agreement on a deal that
will substantially help poor countries, provide extra aid for private sector
development, cut agricultural subsidies and end export subsidies.
The UK Government is delighted that Germany has identified Africa as a top
priority for its G8 and EU Presidencies this year. We will be working hard to
ensure this delivers further progress on Africa.
As part of the Government’s
commitment to accountability, we have established 10 milestones we believe need
to be achieved by July 2007 (Box 2 in the Gleneagles Implementation Plan). I
will provide a full report on these at that time.
Back to top
|