Category: International Development

  • Nick Thomas-Symonds – 2020 Comments on Leaked Government Plans to Process Asylum Offshore

    Nick Thomas-Symonds – 2020 Comments on Leaked Government Plans to Process Asylum Offshore

    The comments made by Nick Thomas-Symonds, the Shadow Home Secretary, on 1 October 2020.

    The Tories are lurching from one inhumane and impractical idea to another. The idea of sending people to Ascension Island, creating waves in the English Channel to wash boats back and buying ferries and oil rigs to process asylum claims shows the Government has lost control and all sense of compassion.

    They should listen to the cross party Foreign Affairs Select Committee and revisit the issue of safe routes and deliver the promised agreement with France, while reversing the terrible decision to abolish the Department for International Development.

  • David Lammy – 2020 Comments on Reports Government are Abandoning Commitment to Human Rights Laws

    David Lammy – 2020 Comments on Reports Government are Abandoning Commitment to Human Rights Laws

    The comments made by David Lammy, the Shadow Justice Secretary, on 13 September 2020.

    Labour is proud of our country’s role in developing human rights at home and abroad.

    Instead of giving unattributed briefings designed to distract the government should focus on getting a Brexit deal and defeating the virus.

    Any attempt to abandon human rights would make life in Britain less secure and hold our country back on the world stage.

  • Preet Gill – 2020 Comments on International Development and the UK

    Preet Gill – 2020 Comments on International Development and the UK

    The comments made by Preet Gill, the Shadow International Development Secretary, on 2 September 2020.

    Since the Department for International Development’s formation in 1997, it has delivered life-saving and life-changing support including vaccinating millions of children against polio and other deadly diseases and ensuring millions have had access to a good education.

    The British people are rightly proud of the impact UK aid and development has had in supporting the world’s poorest and most vulnerable.

    However, under this Government, the future of the UK’s commitment to lead on international development is uncertain.

    With the launch of the Foreign Commonwealth and Development Office today, the Government must show that it is committed to the principles DfID was founded on to consolidate the hard-won soft power and reputation built up since its inception. Now is the time to step up and show genuine global leadership to make the world safer, fairer and better.

  • Preet Gill – 2020 Comments on the Foreign Aid Budget

    Preet Gill – 2020 Comments on the Foreign Aid Budget

    The comments made by Preet Gill, the Shadow International Development Secretary, on 31 August 2020.

    The British public are rightly proud of the role they have played in supporting the world’s poorest and most vulnerable.

    This latest move by the government to backtrack on a manifesto commitment they made last year shows that their word cannot be trusted, and signals a retreat from the world stage in the middle of a global pandemic.

    Labour is committed to continuing our global reputation as a development power by ensuring we continue to show Britain at its best; as an outward-looking, progressive country making the world safer, fairer and better for all.

  • Preet Gill – 2020 Comments on Cost of Whitehall Reorganisation

    Preet Gill – 2020 Comments on Cost of Whitehall Reorganisation

    The comments made by Preet Gill, the Shadow International Development Secretary, on 11 August 2020.

    The Government should be completely focused on getting on with its job of governing the country and steering us through the huge challenges we face.

    Getting rid of an independent Department for International Development during a global pandemic is irresponsible, counter-productive and wrong. It is consistently rated as the most effective and transparent department at delivering real value for money for British taxpayers, whereas the Foreign Office routinely ranks far worse.

    At a time when we need the global health expertise to drive the global response to Covid-19 and avoid further deadly waves, abolishing the department will undoubtedly put the lives of people here in the UK and those abroad at serious risk.

  • Anne-Marie Trevelyan – 2020 Comments on Locusts

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan – 2020 Comments on Locusts

    The comments made by Anne-Marie Trevelyan, the Secretary of State for International Development, on 4 August 2020.

    Vulnerable communities are on the brink of starvation because of the biggest locust outbreak in decades, made worse by the coronavirus pandemic.

    British expertise is playing an important role in equipping companies with the right tools to combat the swarms and track where they will go next.

    But unless other countries also step up and act now, this crisis will spread and cause even more devastation.

  • Wayne David – 2020 Letter on Humanitarian Assistance in Syria

    Wayne David – 2020 Letter on Humanitarian Assistance in Syria

    The letter sent by Wayne David, the Shadow Minister for the Middle East and North Africa, and Anna McMorrin, the Shadow International Development Minister, to James Cleverly, the Minister of State for the Middle East and North Africa, on 29 July 2020.

    Dear Minister,

    RE: UN Security Council Resolution 2533 and cross-border delivery of humanitarian assistance

    We write regarding the failure of the UN Security Council to renew Resolution 2504 on 10th July 2020. The humanitarian impact of failing to authorise border crossings at Bab-al-Salam in north-west Syria and the exclusion of any meaningful action to rectify the border situation in north-east Syria at Al Yarubiyah and Al Ramtha will be catastrophic. In light of the ongoing COVID-19 global health crisis and humanitarian situation, we write to urge the UK Government to use all its influence on the Security Council to broker a way forward to urgently address this deepening emergency.

    Authorised crossing points into Syria provide a crucial mechanism in the delivery of core humanitarian aid to some of the world’s most vulnerable communities. The loss of UN Security Council support for the border crossings at Al Yarubiyah and Al Ramtha in north-east Syria has significantly undermined humanitarian operations and drastically reduced aid to the two million Syrians who require humanitarian assistance. At the time of the loss of both border crossings, only two out of 16 hospitals and four out of 279 primary health centres were operating at full capacity, access to vital medicines fluctuated, and on average only half of aid-dependent Syrians were provided with food aid per month. Increased cross border access, not less, is urgently required.

    Since January the situation in north-east Syria has deteriorated further and COVID-19 has aggravated the aid assistance gap. As of May, only a small number of consignments of UN health supplies have been delivered to the north-east from within the Syrian Arab Republic and Damascus hub, forming three air and two road consignments. PPE, intensive care unit beds, ventilators and incubators have largely been excluded from consignments to hospitals which remain functional.

    In a report published in February, the UN Secretary-General said:

    “At current consumption rates, medical stocks are expected to run out in the coming months.”

    And in a report published in May, the Secretary-General concluded:

    “The combination of more cross-border and cross-line access was required to sustain recent levels of humanitarian assistance, and preferably increase that assistance.”

    The Damascus hub, as the only remaining route for the delivery of aid assistance, is highly politicised and restrictive. Aid transported via the Syrian Arab Republic is one of the most scrutinized modes of delivery for humanitarian assistance in the world. A further 12 months without improved aid access, with the true extent of COVID-19 still unknown and significantly altering the operating environment, means there is an urgent need for real action.

    Many Syrians in the north-west of the country now face seriously deteriorating conditions with many facing the prospect of having to live in overcrowded camps, sharing living environments with multiple families or sleeping out in the open. Practising social distancing measures in these conditions is impossible. Fresh water is scarce, sanitation access is inadequate, and food insecurity and malnutrition are expected to rise. By severing the authorised crossings, Syrians here await a similar fate to that of the north-east for at least the next 12 months.

    Between December 2019 and May 2020 there was a 128% increase in UN consignments at Bab-al-Salam compared to the previous six months and according to the International Rescue Committee health supplies passing through Bab-al-Salam in May reached one million beneficiaries. The crossing is increasingly relied upon as needs surge. The loss of the border crossing will be extremely serious and there can be absolutely no medical or humanitarian justification for such actions. Our understanding is that both China and Russia must bear responsibility for blocking measures to facilitate this crossing and for the loss of UN support for the north-east crossings.

    There is a pressing need to find a way forward to allow the UN, partners and agencies to provide humanitarian relief and medical support and alleviate and prevent the spread and transmission of COVID-19 in the north-west and north-east of Syria, and to continue to tackle the pre-existing health and social vulnerabilities.

    We believe, the UK must show global leadership and work with our partners on the international stage to ensure every action is taken to guarantee current aid remains unimpeded and that we play our part in the global response to COVID19. This must be done as soon as possible, rather than waiting 12 months until cross border access is a matter for debate and scrutiny at the Security Council again.

    We are also urging the Government to increase its efforts to bring about an end to hostilities in Syria. Recent reports of Russian air strikes and increased terrorist attacks are a clear indication that there could be a return to the levels of conflict which was seen at the start of this year. We would therefore urge the British Government to use all its influence to help ensure that the fragile ceasefire does not break down.

    To conclude, we are calling on the Government to ensure the UK uses its position on the Security Council to work with Germany and Belgium as Security Council penholders on Syria to bring forward new stand-alone resolutions to authorise the border crossings in the north-west and north-east, particularly if the COVID-19 situation deteriorates; work with Security Council members to explore whether the Damascus hub and remaining aid delivery routes can be improved; do everything possible to reinforce the ceasefire in Syria and urge all parties to work closely with the UN Special Envoy.

    We look forward to your reply.

    Yours sincerely,

    Wayne David MP – Shadow FCO Minister for the Middle East and North Africa

    Anna McMorrin MP – Shadow International Development Minister

  • Anna McMorrin – 2020 Comments on Humanitarian Assistance in Syria

    Anna McMorrin – 2020 Comments on Humanitarian Assistance in Syria

    Comments made by Anna McMorrin, the Shadow International Development Minister, on 29 July 2020.

    We believe, the UK must show global leadership and work with our partners on the international stage to ensure every action is taken to guarantee current aid remains unimpeded and that we play our part in the global response to COVID19. We are also urging the Government to increase its efforts to bring about an end to hostilities in Syria.

  • Anne-Marie Trevelyan – 2020 Comments on Locust Swarms

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan – 2020 Comments on Locust Swarms

    The comments made by Anne-Marie Trevelyan, the Secretary of State for International Development, on 23 July 2020.

    Vulnerable communities are on the brink of starvation because of the biggest locust outbreak in decades, made worse by the coronavirus pandemic.

    British expertise is playing an important role in equipping companies with the right tools to combat the swarms and track where they will go next.

    But unless other countries also step up and act now, this crisis will spread and cause even more devastation.

  • Preet Gill – 2020 Comments on the FCO/DFID Merger

    Preet Gill – 2020 Comments on the FCO/DFID Merger

    Text of the comments made by Preet Gill, the Shadow International Development Secretary, on 16 July 2020.

    This report provides yet more damning evidence that the Prime Minister’s decision to axe the Department for International Development was done on a whim.

    It was taken with no consultation, no evidence and no plan, but it is not too late for him to change his mind.

    Labour recognises the importance of development and is committed to supporting the world’s poorest and most vulnerable.