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NEW 2008 DATA REPORT SHOWS INCREASING EVIDENCE THAT TARGETED AID IS GETTING GOOD RESULTS IN AFRICA, BUT THE G8 ARE FALLING FURTHER BEHIND ON MEETING THEIR COMMITMENTS
Washington, D.C…. The DATA Report 2008, released today by The ONE Campaign, a leading global anti-poverty organization, shows the G8 are falling further behind on the commitment they made in 2005 to contribute an additional $22 billion in assistance to Africa by 2010. According to The DATA Report 2008, the G8 are halfway to the 2010 deadline, but so far have only delivered $3 billion, or 14 percent, of the $22 billion commitment. If the G8 continue at their current pace, they will collectively fall far short of where they pledged to be by 2010.
While the pace of delivery is deeply concerning, the good news is that the assistance that has been delivered is making a real, measurable difference on the ground in lives saved and futures brightened. Because of recent increases in development assistance:
These statistics make clear that targeted development assistance, implemented in partnership with effective African leadership, works. There are no more excuses for not delivering quickly on what the G8 promised. The DATA Report lays out a clear roadmap for how the G8 can get on track to meet their 2010 goals by scaling up measures that have been proven to work.
Like other G8 members, the United States is off track on meeting its funding commitments to Africa, slipping from last year’s pace. However, because of progress primarily in health-related efforts, DATA estimates that the U.S. will have sufficient resources in the pipeline to fulfill its commitment by 2010.
The DATA Report 2008 was released today at a press conference in Paris that included Bono; Bob Geldof; Michel Kazatchkine, Executive Director of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria; and Arunma Oteh, Vice President, Corporate Services of the African Development Bank.
Launching the 2008 DATA Report, Bono said:
“There's good news and bad news ... the good news is that the aid money that has been delivered is making a real and measurable difference in lives saved and kids in school. In the last few years, more than 2 million Africans have been given access to life-saving AIDS drugs, 26 million children have been immunized and 29 million kids in Africa are going to school for the first time. But as I've been saying, the good news makes the bad news worse ... the G8’s failure to follow through on its commitments has left millions of lives in the balance and a distrust in the electorate, leading many to believe that G8 meetings are more about photo ops than real commitment to Liberté, Égalité and Fraternité.”
Bob Geldof, advocate and DATA principal said:
"14 percent! What a contemptuous joke the G8 have become. The poor of Africa were given a signed guarantee by the leaders of the world's largest economies. This contract has two more years to run and it is now clear that most of these countries have no intention of fulfilling their pledge.
In the foreword to the 2008 DATA Report, Archbishop Emeritus Desmond M Tutu, now also serving as International Patron to DATA and ONE, writes:
“We want to achieve success not through a hand out, but through hard work, persistence, creativity and a true partnership with the developed world. We’re not there yet, but we have the roadmap to get there if the West keeps the commitments it made, with such fanfare, at Gleneagles and if African leaders keep their promises to their citizens too.”
The 2008 DATA Report (www.one.org/report) contains extensive detail on the state of each country’s progress towards the 2010 commitment.
Highlights from each country are below:
Over the past three years the G8 as a collective has increased assistance to Africa by $1 billion year over year. In a new estimation by DATA of G8 budget projections, the G8 is expected to increase assistance to Africa in 2008 by $2.6 billion. This is an important improvement over previous years, but still far from what is needed. The G8 would need to increase assistance to Africa by $6.4 billion in 2008 in order to be on track to meet their 2010 commitment.
While progress to date has been underwhelming, the DATA Report makes clear that it is still possible for the G8 to keep its historic commitment to Africa. Whether or not it is kept is up to the leaders of the G8 and the citizens in whose name the promises were made. The successes that have been achieved to date should refuel efforts to meet the 2010 target
About DATA and ONE
DATA is an advocacy organization dedicated to eradicating extreme poverty and AIDS in Africa. Founded in 2002, DATA calls on the governments of the world's industrialized nations to keep their existing commitments to Africa and adopt new trade, aid and debt policies that will help Africans put themselves on the path to long-term prosperity and stability. DATA also calls on Africa's leaders to strengthen democracy, accountability and transparency so that Africa's citizens are better empowered to direct their own development.
At the core of ONE (www.ONE.org) is a belief that these issues are not about charity, but about justice and equality. For the first time in human history, we have the science, the technology and the resources to end extreme poverty. With this unprecedented opportunity, comes the responsibility to act.
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