Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Make Poverty History 2005 What did, and did not happen 2005 – The year the government changed its mind.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Make Poverty History 2005 What did, and did not happen 2005 – The year the government changed its mind."— Presentation transcript:

1 Make Poverty History 2005 What did, and did not happen 2005 – The year the government changed its mind

2 MAKE POVERTY HISTORY 2005 UK chair of the G8 and holding presidency of EU Trade justice Drop the debt More and better aid 2005 – The year the government changed its mind

3 JANUARY / FEBRUARY 2005 – The year the government changed its mind 600 female clergy march on Downing Street led by Dawn French, “the Vicar of Dibley” Nelson Mandela speaks in Trafalgar Square

4 APRIL 2005 – The year the government changed its mind Global Week of Action. Campaigners in 80 countries unite in the call for trade justice In the UK 25,000 attend the wake up to trade justice all night vigil in Whitehall

5 JULY 2005 – The year the government changed its mind 250,000 campaigners rally in Edinburgh G8 summit meets in Gleneagles

6 NOVEMBER 2005 – The year the government changed its mind 8000 lobby their MPs ahead of WTO meeting Officially the most effective mass lobby ever 375 MPs lobbied in one afternoon

7 DECEMBER 2005 – The year the government changed its mind WTO talks in Hong Kong: before and during….

8 2005 – The year the government changed its mind

9 What you achieved 2005 – The year the government changed its mind Aid £50 billion more for Africa Aid levels rising not falling × But aid is still only 0.36% of national income

10 What you achieved 2005 – The year the government changed its mind Debt 18 countries receive more debt cancellation - more to benefit later ×However many countries not included ×No action on ‘illegitimate debt’ (debt incurred as a result of loans to dictators)

11 What you achieved 2005 – The year the government changed its mind Trade ‘You have transformed the perception of the trade deal we need’ Alan Johnson Sec of State for Trade and Industry 24 Nov 2005

12 What you achieved 2005 – The year the government changed its mind Trade ‘Britain has been a whole hearted supporter of free trade… we remain an unashamed champion of free trade.’ Tony Blair Prime minister 1998

13 What you achieved 2005 – The year the government changed its mind Trade 'because of the challenge you posed to us, the government have said clearly that poor countries should not be forced into trade liberalisation.' Gordon Brown 15 April 2005

14 What you achieved Department for International Development ‘We will not make our aid conditional on specific policy decisions by partner governments, or attempt to impose policy choices on them (including in sensitive economic areas such as privatisation and trade liberalisation.)’ Africa Commission ‘Liberalisation must not be forced on Africa through trade or aid conditions.’ Labour party manifesto ‘We will end the practice of making aid conditional on sensitive economic policy choices, such as trade liberalisation and privatisation.’ Department of Trade and Industry ‘We will not force trade liberalisation on developing countries either through trade negotiations or aid conditionality.’ G8 Communiqué ‘It is up to developing countries themselves and their governments to take the lead on development. They need to decide, plan and sequence their economic policies to fit their own development strategies.’ 2005 – The year the government changed its mind

15 What you achieved Trade ‘we will not force poor countries to liberalise through aid or trade agreements’ UK abolishes conditions attached to aid 2005 – The year the government changed its mind

16 What still needs to be done 2005 – The year the government changed its mind Trade × IMF and World Bank continue to attach conditions to aid and debt cancellation × The right words, but no action yet on trade agreements

17 2006 – time for action 2005 – The year the government changed its mind Words into action Holding companies to account for their actions overseas. Country specific campaigns to ensure trade policies can work for poor people

18 2006 – words into action Rules on companies Legislation to hold British companies to account for their activities overseas. Bill before parliament in Spring 2006 Supported by Tearfund, WDM, Oxfam, Christian Aid……… 2005 – The year the government changed its mind

19 2006 – words into action Solidarity campaigns Campaigning with partners for specific proposals eg. Senegal, India, Bolivia, Sri Lanka Making trade work for poor people 2005 – The year the government changed its mind

20 Time for action 2005 – The year the government changed its mind Get involved! WDM meeting: 8 th Feb World Vision: Stop AIDS campaign Oxfam: Control Arms Campaign Tearfund: Micah challenge Climate change


Download ppt "Make Poverty History 2005 What did, and did not happen 2005 – The year the government changed its mind."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google