Aid Cuts

The Cardinal Archbishop of Westminster and the Archbishop of Canterbury have joined forces to condemn cuts to the UK’s Aid budget that will do “real damage” to Yemen and other countries in crisis.

The government has said it would not meet the 0.7% target in the coming financial year and spending will be cut to 0.5% of national income – a move that would save about £4bn a year.

Cardinal Vincent Nichols and Archbishop Justin Welby told the Evening Standard that “balancing the books during a pandemic on the backs of the world’s poorest is not acceptable.”

They warn it is a question of “morality”, adding: “We must not walk by on the other side.”

Chancellor Rishi Sunak has said the cut is a ‘temporary’ measure to cope with the deficit caused by the COVID-19 pandemic and that the 0.7% target would return when finances allowed.

However, some MPs fear that the reduction could be permanent.

“Saying the Government will only do this ‘when the fiscal situation allows’ is deeply worrying, suggesting that it will act in contravention of its legally binding target,” say the archbsihops.

“This promise, repeatedly made even during the pandemic, has been broken and must be put right.”

The 0.7% baseline for Britain’s aid budget is enshrined in law by the International Development (Official Development Assistance Target) Act of 2015.

Categories: 

More News

Prayers for Yemen

February 14, 2019
Prayer request from Bishop Declan

Prayers for Yemen

Please keep the people of the Yemen in your...Read more

Porrajmos – Report of a Meeting organised by the Salisbury Justice and Peace Group

February 12, 2019

The murder by the Nazis of between a quarter and a third of all the gypsies of Europe during the Second World War...Read more

Holy Redeemer notices for 9 February

February 9, 2019

• On Wednesday church cleaning takes place here, before Mass. Please come and help if you can, anytime after 9. Mass will be at...Read more