Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

Aid agencies ask for increased funding in 2023

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Feb, 2023 05:04 PM
  • Aid agencies ask for increased funding in 2023

OTTAWA — Dozens of Canada's international aid agencies are asking Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland to increase the country’s foreign assistance contributions. 

The request comes in a letter signed by 75 non-governmental organizations, including the Canadian chapters of groups such as Oxfam, Save the Children, Unicef and World Vision.

They're asking Freeland to increase international aid funding from the $8.15 billion pledged in the last budget and to gradually ramp that figure up to $10 billion by 2025. 

"Our investments have acted as a bulwark against rising authoritarianism by supporting democracy, women’s and children’s rights, and development in countries where rights are under attack," reads a draft version of the letter provided to The Canadian Press. "... If Canada fails to maintain its commitment to year-on-year increases in international assistance in the federal budget this spring, all of this is under threat."

The 2023 budget is expected to be tabled sometime this spring, though a date has not yet been formally announced.

The Liberals have promised more money for international spending each year since taking office in 2015, but global crises such as the COVID-19 pandemic and Russia's invasion of Ukraine have changed the way that funding has been allocated. 

"As we come out of the COVID pandemic, we see a world that faces multiple, compounding crises, whether it's conflict, climate, inflation, the rollback on democracy and human rights in several parts of the world," said Kate Higgins, chief executive officer of Cooperation Canada, which represents 96 Canadian non-profit organizations and was among the letter's signatories. 

"In that context, we see Canadian international assistance as a very strategic and smart investment in the world that we want to see."

Higgins said investing in international assistance is the "smart thing to do and it's the right thing to do." 

As of late 2021, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was still urging government ministers to increase Canada's international development assistance every year. 

But Freeland has also previously stressed the need the reduce and review government spending amid global economic turmoil tied to pandemic, war, rising inflation and increased interest rates. 

Higgins said Canada is currently supporting democracy in developing countries where rights are threatened, as well as protecting access to health and education for women and gender diverse people abroad. 

"It also gives Canada diplomatic and foreign policy leverage by matching our words to solid investments in actions," she said.

The letter is the latest lobbying push by aid groups worried the Liberals will use spending benchmarks set before the pandemic rather than building on the new, higher baseline established since its onset.  

Elise Legault, Canada’s director for the ONE campaign, a global initiative to end poverty, said it has never been more important for the federal government to increase funding for international assistance. 

"Canada showed up for Ukraine and the world noticed, but we also have to keep our word to other countries where crises they didn't cause are piling up, like the pandemic, rising food prices and climate change," she said in a statement. "We have to act now to help prevent further suffering and instability."

Earlier this month, International Development Minister Harjit Sajjan told groups at a reception marking International Development Week that aid groups needed to drum up public support by doing a better job publicizing their progress. 

"We need to be louder when things are going well, and saying, 'This is conflict prevention. This is success.' And we should be celebrating that even more," he said. "Policies are one thing. Money is one thing. But action can only happen through you."

MORE National ARTICLES

No deal without pharmacare bill, says NDP leader

No deal without pharmacare bill, says NDP leader
New Democrat Leader Jagmeet Singh says if the Liberal government does not introduce a pharmacare bill in the House of Commons this year, he will consider it a deal-breaker. Both parties signed a confidence-and-supply agreement last March, in which the NDP agreed to support the minority Liberal government in key votes until 2025.    

No deal without pharmacare bill, says NDP leader

Illegal border crossings at pre-pandemic levels

Illegal border crossings at pre-pandemic levels
The frozen bodies of Jagdish Patel, 39; his wife Vaishaliben Patel, 37; their 11-year-old daughter, Vihangi; and their three-year-old son, Dharmik, were found on Jan. 19, 2022, near Emerson, Man., just metres from the U.S. border.    

Illegal border crossings at pre-pandemic levels

Slide keeps residents out of Campbell River condos

Slide keeps residents out of Campbell River condos
An evacuation order was issued for the properties in the 700 block of Island Highway South after the slides came down Tuesday. No one was hurt, but the mud and debris demolished a ground-level covered parking area behind one of the condos.    

Slide keeps residents out of Campbell River condos

More universities reviewing Turpel-Lafond degrees

More universities reviewing Turpel-Lafond degrees
The Indigenous Women's Collective says in a statement that the honours should be withdrawn because the former law professor "stole" the identity and lived experiences of Indigenous women.

More universities reviewing Turpel-Lafond degrees

Hootsuite lays off 7% of staff, names new CEO

Hootsuite lays off 7% of staff, names new CEO
Social media technology company Hootsuite Inc. is laying off seven per cent of its staff in its third job cut in the last year and replacing its chief executive. The Vancouver company says the latest round of layoffs amounts to about 70 people and is meant to position the business for the long term.    

Hootsuite lays off 7% of staff, names new CEO

B.C. officer remembered as genuine, dedicated

B.C. officer remembered as genuine, dedicated
Nelson Police Service Chief Const. Donovan Fisher announced Wade Tittemore's promotion at his funeral service today, saying they had already planned to move the constable up to their general investigation section before he died. Tittemore, who was 43, died while off duty when an avalanche rolled over him and a co-worker Jan. 9 while they were skiing in the backcountry in southeastern B.C.

B.C. officer remembered as genuine, dedicated