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Oxfam: Jakarta Tsunami Emergency Summit

Published: Fri 7 Jan 2005 02:09 PM
Friday 7 January 2005
Jakarta Tsunami Emergency Summit: Oxfam urges public to hold their leaders accountable for promises
International agency Oxfam today urged the people of the world to hold their leaders accountable for the Tsunami Summit promises of around $NZ 5.4 billion in aid as well as action on debt relief to assist those countries devastated by the tsunami.
"Global leaders have rightly come to the table in Jakarta pledging substantial long-term aid. The real test will be to ensure that these promises are kept when the media spotlight turns away from the tsunami disaster" said Oxfam Policy Director James Ensor, currently in Jakarta for the Emergency Summit.
"Ordinary people around the world have donated hundreds of millions of dollars to assist the tsunami survivors. They have every right to be outraged if their Government's promises made today in Jakarta do not materialise," said Ensor. "Money pledged must be new money, not diverted from existing development programmes or humanitarian crises such as in Sudan."
Oxfam is calling for world leaders to fulfil Kofi Annan's immediate demand for $NZ1.4 billion in cash to fund emergency relief over the next six months and welcomes confirmation of the leadership role of the United Nations in coordinating aid and reconstruction.
Oxfam supports some world leaders' rhetoric for a debt moratorium for tsunami-affected countries, which collectively owe the rich world in excess of $NZ432 billion. "It would be immoral for rich countries to continue to reap billions of dollars in debt payments from these already poor countries now suffering such devastation," said Ensor.
Talk of debt moratoriums is not enough – we need action. Other countries must now follow the lead of Canada in implementing a debt moratorium at next week's meeting of the Paris Club of creditor countries. A taskforce involving the World Bank and Asian Development Bank must also be established to develop a plan to substantially reduce the debts of the worst-affected countries.
"World leaders now have an obligation to tackle world poverty and reduce people's vulnerability to future disasters during the remainder of 2005. This unprecedented disaster has thrown millions of already poor people across Asia into even deeper poverty. Meanwhile, unnecessary suffering and death continues around the world from the Congo to Sudan and elsewhere. This disaster increases the imperative for rich nations to commit to ending poverty by doubling their aid, cancelling the debts of the world's poorest countries and making trade fair for the developing world," said Ensor. Oxfam will redouble its efforts to achieve these outcomes in 2005. The G8 leaders summit in Scotland in July, the United Nations Millennium Development Goals summit in September and the World Trade Organisation Ministerial meeting in Hong Kong in December are three critical events where world leaders can begin to make poverty history.
To donate to Oxfam New Zealand’s TSUNAMI EMERGENCY APPEAL call 0800 400 666 or donate online www.oxfam.org.nz
Oxfam works with others to find lasting solutions to poverty and suffering. www.oxfam.org.nz
ENDS

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