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De Europese Unie is de grootste hulpdonor ter wereld. Conord, het netwerk van Europese NGO's vindt de plannen waarmee de Europese Unie naar Busan trekt veel te weinig ambitieus.
Uit een recent onderzoek bleek dat 84% van de Europeanen ontwikkelingssamenwerking welgenegen is, en dit ondanks de financiële crisis.
'Helaas bevatten de Europese voorstellen voor Busan te weinig steun voor ongebonden hulp, locale verankering en conditionaliteit. Ontwikkelingshulp moet meer ten goede komen aan lokale initiatieven en de lokale gemeenschappen moeten meer zeggenschap krijgen over hun eigen ontwikkeling' vindt Wiske Jult, 11.11.11 medewerker Europees Ontwikkelingsbeleid.
Lees hieronder het volledige persbericht van Concord.
CONCORD - European confederation of Relief and Development NGOs - www.concordeurope.org
Press Release - 28/11/2011
Make €53billion EU aid a year count in Busan say NGOs
(Busan, 28/11/11) The world's biggest aid donor, the European Union, should stand up for ambitious proposals to tackle global poverty at the Busan High Level Forum (HLF4) aid summit. CONCORD, Europe's Relief and Development NGO confederation present in Busan, urges European leaders to make its extensive aid programme more effective ahead of tomorrow's summit.
The EU gives €53billion a year to developing countries as aid, this makes it the world's largest donor. That's over 50% of global aid.
$4billion could be saved per year by the EU if it implements better aid reforms, shows its own calculations.
84% of Europeans support development aid, despite the financial crisis said a survey on 23 November.
62% of European citizens are in favour of increasing development aid to at least 0.7% of EU Gross National Income by 2015.
Yet despite Europe's global contribution to aid and its citizen's support, NGOs express concern that the EU is going into Busan with weaker ambitions compared to the strong leadership it showed in 2008 at the last summit of its kind in Accra, Ghana.
"The EU has a positive role to play in supporting more effective aid policies. But we are disappointed to see that greater aid transparency is being blocked by certain EU countries." says CONCORD President Justin Kilcullen.
The EU agreed on its common position for Busan on 14 November in Brussels.
"Unfortunately the position misses out on supporting new measures recognised for improving the impact of aid such as untying aid, local procurement and conditionality. These measures could get aid funds to the local economy in developing countries and put them in the driving seat of their own development," adds Wiske Jult, 11.11.11 representative of the Belgian NGO platform and CONCORD AidWatch member.
Busan sees the international community at a crossroads, with a real chance to support poor countries tackle poverty and end aid dependency.
"We came with high expectations of a new era of aid, but on the eve of the High Level Forum, we risk a weak agreement which represents hardly any progress from 3 years ago. This largely due to lack of political commitment in the OECD countries, who need to wake up to the demands of the partner countries and CSOs in the days to come. Reforms need to work towards ending aid dependency," says Bimal Phunyal, ActionAid Director from Nepal.
For CONCORD it is essential that the Busan summit realizes that for development to be effective, any new agenda must take into account policy coherence for development.
Civil society organisations (CSOs) from around the world are participants at the Busan summit, the first time they have equal footing with governments and donors.
CONCORD is a member of both BetterAid and the Open Forum for CSO Development Effectiveness who are mobilizing CSOs at HLF4.
Follow our live updates from Busan: http://aidwatch.concordeurope.org
1. CONCORD is the European NGO confederation for relief and development. CONCORDs 26 national associations and 18 international networks represent over 1,600 NGOs which are supported by millions of citizens across Europe. CONCORD leads reflection and political actions and regularly engages in dialogue with the European institutions and other civil society organisations. www.concordeurope.org
2. CONCORD coordinates AidWatch, a pan-European aid monitoring initiative that publishes statistics on aid levels across the EU27. In May 2011 CONCORD released its annual AidWatch report which showed that the EU inflated aid by €5billion. The report contains all aid figures of the 27 member states of the European Union. For more information visit http://aidwatch.concordeurope.org
3. BetterAid unites nearly one thousand development organizations from civil society worldwide, and has been working on development cooperation and challenging the aid effectiveness agenda since January 2007. BetterAid is leading many of the civil society activities including in-country consultations, studies and monitoring in the lead up to the 4th High Level Forum on Aid Effectiveness (HLF4) in Busan on 29 November - 1 December 2011. www.betteraid.org
4. Open Forum for CSO Development Effectiveness is a global, fully participatory consultation process run by and for Civil Society Organizations (CSOs) to build an international CSO consensus on common development effectiveness standards and enabling conditions required from governments and donors.
Based on consolidated inputs from thousands of CSOs worldwide, the Open Forum has finalized the International Framework for CSO Development Effectiveness - an integral part of CSO Key Asks for the 4th High Level Forum on Aid Effectiveness that details the role of CSOs as independent development actors, and a distinct long-term reference for the development work of CSOs worldwide. www.cso-effectiveness.org.