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GLENEAGLES, Scotland, July 8 (Xinhuanet) -- The leaders of the Group of Eight
(G8) industrialized nations on Friday agreed in this Scottish resort to increase
aid to developing countries by around 50 billion US dollars per year by 2010, of
which about 25 billion dollars a year to help lift Africa out of poverty.
"We agreed that we and our African partners had a common interest in building
on that progress to create a strong, peaceful and prosperous Africa,"
said the leaders in a joint statement issued after a two-day summit here.
The statement came after leaders of the G8, a group of most industrialized countries
compromising Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia and
the United States, held a dialogue with seven African leaders from Algeria, Ethiopia,
Ghana, Nigeria, Senegal, South Africa and Tanzania.
The G8 leaders endorsed a plan to cancel all of the debts owed to
international institutions by 18 heavily indebted poor countries, most of them
in Africa.
The leaders set out a comprehensive plan to support Africa's progress and
agreed to provide extra resources for Africa's peacekeeping forces and boost
investment in the sectors of health and education.
"We know this is only the beginning. We must take this spirit forward to
the UN Millennium Review Summit in New York and ensure a successful conclusion
to the Doha Development Agenda," said the leaders.
British Prime Minister Tony Blair, who hosts the annual meeting of the G8
leaders, has been pushing his counterparts to endorse a proposal to double aid
to Africa.
The G8 leaders agreed to strengthen the African Partners Forum and
establish a Joint Action Plan to ensure the implementation of the measures.
However, some non-government organizations criticized the summit for its
failure to delivery justice for Africa, claiming the deal announced will not
tackle poverty effectively.
"The deal that has been announced falls way short of our demands. We have some
aid, but not enough, some debt relief but not enough and virtually nothing on
trade," said Caroline Sande Mukulira from Action Aid's Southern African
program.
"Once again Africa's people have been short-changed," she added. Enditem
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