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Politics

Germany to overhaul foreign aid policy

May 5, 2020

Germany plans a shakeup of its foreign aid, limiting its "partner" list to 60 nations and dropping Burundi and Myanmar. Minister Gerd Müller says knock-out criteria will be corruption, rights abuses and poor governance.

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Development Minister Gerd Müller
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/AFP/T. Schwarz

Germany is planning to heavily restructure its foreign aid agenda, Development Minister Gerd Müller told DW on Tuesday.

Germany's current list of 85 "partner" nations is too much and its annual aid expenditure of €10 billion ($10.9 billion) will now focus on just 60 nations, development aid minister Gerd Müller told DW.

"Our partner countries must understand this signal," said Müller, stipulating German criteria for future aid cooperation: good governance, respect for human rights and tackling corruption.

"With money alone we cannot solve the problems of Africa and the developing countries," said Müller, adding that partners which met criteria would get more.

Those which remained "reform resistant" would lose German cooperation.

Read more: Climate change compounds hunger, conflicts, German aid group says

Four key objectives

Outlining the concept "BMZ 2030" for his ministry known as the Federal Ministry for Cooperation, Müller said it planned four focuses: food security, health and family planning, education, energy and climate.

Vocational training — a German specialty — would account for 25% of Germany's aid budget spent abroad, he said.

Fragmented "piece-meal" projects would end and liaison via EU and multilateral entities would be sought, notably coordination with France and Britain to avoid duplications coupled with priority-setting to improve aid effectiveness.

And "global partners" such as China, Russia and Brazil had been identified in campaigns to safeguard biodiversity, oceans and climate.

Good marks, bad marks

Among reform-oriented nations listed by Berlin were Tunisia, Ghana and Ethiopia.

Sidelined would be Burundi for alleged poor governance and Myanmar over its mistreatment of minority Rohingyas.

Instead, they would receive aid via a waste-water clarification plant at a refugee camp in neighboring Bangladesh.

Venro laments BMZ pullback

In reaction, Bernd Bornhorst, chairman of the umbrella network Venro, representing some 140 humanitarian groups in Germany, said civil society advocates in partner nations depended on political dialog and would be "weakened without the BMZ's own involvement."

The German parliament's opposition Free Democrats (FDP) accused Müller of "practically" driving states such as Nepal, Sri Lanka, Myanmar and Laos into the arms of China.

The German Protestant agency Brot für die Welt (Bread for the World) said church and other charities would not be able fill aid gaps left by BMZ pullbacks.

The Catholic Misereor agency said: "It is precisely problem states with fractured statehood, not just the "reform champions," that must remain on the agenda."

Read more: World Bank forest-rescue program 'kickstarted' by Germany

German Corona aid fund

Müller on Tuesday also announced a BMZ fast-track coronavirus program worth €1 billion to help poor nations with health infrastructure and food security.

"The Corona crisis hits the poorest of the poor hardest.There is no intensive [hospital] care in Mali or Sudan if someone there has the corona virus," Müller told DW while accusing rich nations of encapsulating themselves into their shells.

Pandemic-induced school closures in poor nations had left 500 million children without their once-a-day meals they only got during tuition, he said.

The European Union, he said, should do more to assist "our neighboring regions in Africa and arc of crisis zones around Syria," calling on the EU to provide €50 billion in stabilization credits and emergency assistance.

Call to tax digital giants

Müller of Bavaria's Christian Social Union (CSU), a partner of Chancellor Angela Merkel's Christian Democrats, backed calls for a world-wide tax on digital giants such as Amazon seen as Corona-crisis earners through logistic services.

Georg Graf Waldersee, chairman of UNICEF's German branch said pandemic control measures made it increasingly difficult for the UN children's agency to deliver aid promptly to millions of children and teenagers.

ipj/aw (KNA, AFP, dpa)

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