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Derniers articles :

9 out of 10 World Bank poverty reduction programmes demand privatisation - World Development Movement - 19 September 2005
Resisting Privatisation of Resources and Services - 18 July 2005
Setbacks to privatisations across Africa - Bretton Woods Projet - 13 June 2005


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Forum social mondial de Tunis - mars 2013 : Consultation publique des axes du forum social mondial de Dakar
Cameroun : Mémorandum des organisations de la société civile contre les désagréments causés aux usagers de l’électricité par la société AES/Sonel
Afrique du Sud : Appeal Against Landmark High Court Water Case Judgement Concludes at Supreme Court of Appeal
Mali : A quand la justice pour les travailleurs de Huicoma et les Grevistes de Morila
Afrique du Sud : New Rating System: The City of Johannesburg must get its house in order!
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Niger : Déclaration conjointe sur la situation de l’alimentation en eau potable de la ville d’Arlit de la Coordination de la Société Civile d’Arlit et du Collectif pour la Défense du Droit à l’Énergie (CODDAE)
Mali : Déclaration contre la privatisation de la filière coton de la CMDT du MSV
Tanzanie : UK water company fails in $20 million compensation claim from Tanzanian government
République démocratique du Congo : Non à la privatisation de la societe nationale d’électricité (SNEL)
Niger : Mémorandum de la Convergence Citoyenne


Site(s) web :

Coopération Solidarité développement aux PTT :
Public Services International Research Unit :
Anti -privatisation forum :
Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU) :
Ghana National Coalition against the Privatisation of Water - NCAP :
Integrated Social Development Center (ISODEC) :
International Labour Research and Information Group :
Mine Watch Zambia :
Water Justice :


Dernier(s) document(s) :

Pipe dreams - The failure of the private sector to invest in water services in developing countries - By PSI and World Development Movement - 21 March 2006 (PDF - 278.3 kb)

UK takes ’significant step forward’ to delinking aid and privatisation

5 March 2005
World Development Movement - http://www.wdm.org.uk


Development campaigners the World Development Movement today welcomed the decision by the UK Government to abandon one of the key means by which it imposes free market economic polices on developing countries. In a review of aid policy the Department for International Development (DFID) announced that it would no longer make trade liberalisation and privatisation of key utilities and public services a condition of poor countries receiving UK aid.

WDM’s Head of Policy Peter Hardstaff today said: «This paper represents a significant step forward for UK aid policy and a victory for campaigners who have worked hard to convince the Government to stop imposing policies such as privatisation and trade liberalisation on poor countries. Hilary Benn should be congratulated.»

WDM called on the Government to follow the logic of the move and tackle other mechanisms by which it currently pushes privatisation such as using the aid budget to fund UK business consultancies to promote water privatisation in developing countries and linking UK aid to International Monetary Fund and World Bank privatisation demands.

«Having admitted that it is wrong in principle to force privatisation and trade liberalization on developing countries, the Government must finish the job. This welcome decision now opens up a glaring contradication with other parts of UK policy. There are numerous other ways that the Government continues to support these failed policies. It would be hypocritical of the UK Government to break the link between its own aid and privatisation but continue to make UK aid conditional on countries meeting demands for privatisation by the IMF and World Bank», said Hardstaff.




Notes for editors:

WDM’s submission to the DFID review on aid and privatisation conditionality is available at http://www.wdm.org.uk/campaigns/cambriefs/ parliamentary/subconditionality_11 04.doc

Contact:

Dave Timms, Press Officer, WDM: 07711 875 345 or email him.





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