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Malta’s €150,000 pledge to Somalia aid ‘ludicrous’
EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton and Somali’s President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud arriving at the New Deal for Somalia conference in Brussels on September 16. Photo: Reuters
EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton and Somali’s President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud arriving at the New Deal for Somalia conference in Brussels on September 16. Photo: Reuters


Tuesday, October 01, 2013

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The Government’s €150,000 three-year aid package for Somalia has been described as “ludicrous” by international development NGO Kopin. Malta’s pledge formed part of the €1.8 billion that was promised to Somalia by international donors last week in a “new deal” designed to rebuild the troubled country after two decades of civil strife.

Among notable EU donors, Germany pledged €90 million, Sweden €170 million, Denmark $124 million (€92 million) and the UK £50 million (€60 million).

Kopin pointed out that the Government would have more funds to spend on meaningful foreign aid if it did not use much of its overseas development assistance budget for detaining irregular migrants at home.

“The Maltese Government could perform much better in its development work, starting off from investing in genuine aid,” Kopin said when contacted.

Last year the Government spent approximately 52 per cent of its €14.3 million ODA budget on the detention of irregular migrants during their first year on the island.

“Freeing up €7.5 million [used for detention] could contribute far more than the ludicrous €50,000 per year to Somalia,” Kopin said.

Speaking to Times of Malta last May, the Foreign Ministry vowed to continue the previous administration’s practice of classifying detention of irregular migrants in their first year as ODA. This is in line with Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development guidelines.

The Government has stated that it intends to honour the EU commitment for member states that joined the union post-2002 to spend 0.33 per cent of Gross National Income on overseas aid by 2015.

“However, this figure does not withstand basic critical analysis by inter­national human rights standards,” Kopin said, adding that virtually all member states use dubious mechanisms to inflate their own figures.

When Foreign Minister George Vella announced that Malta would contribute €50,000 per annum over three years to Somalia at the New Deal conference in Brussels, he highlighted that the island had experienced “heavy influxes of irregular migrants from the Horn of Africa, of whom one-third come from Somalia”.

Contacted by this newspaper, Nationalist MEP Roberta Metsola referred to the €84.9 million Malta has received from the EU since 2007 to help the country deal with migrant influxes.

“In comparison, the Government has pledged €50,000 per year to Somalia, or about half of what Malta is reportedly paying for Minister Konrad Mizzi’s wife to be its ‘envoy’,” Dr Metsola said, referring to Sai Mizzi’s engagement as investment envoy for Malta Enterprise in Asia.

“I expected much better. To me it shows that the Government has not yet grasped the significance of a stable Somalia,” the MEP said, adding that the African state was still very fragile.

“A resurgent Somalia is perhaps the only viable long-term solution to the immigration flows from this country to the Mediterranean.”

Kopin said it will take much longer than three years for Somalia to develop into a stable, peaceful state with fair political systems, an effective educational system and successful reconciliation mechanisms.

“Only with a huge genuine effort supported by the international community could this country become more stable. However, this will certainly take at least two generations. The region remains one of the poorest in the world, which means migration streams will continue coming north in the future,” Kopin said.

A Foreign Ministry spokesman said that, while €50,000 per year may appear comparatively small, “if you take it per capita, we have one of the highest pledges, if not the highest one to Somalia”. This does not bear up to scrutiny.

Sweden, for example, has a population of 9.6 million, meaning its total three-year contribution to the New Deal for Somalia equates to €17.71 per citizen.

Malta, on the other hand, has a population of 418,000, meaning its three-year contribution works out as 36 cents per citizen.

Taking into account that Sweden’s GDP per capita is more than two-and-a-half times higher than Malta’s, there is still a significant difference in the contributions.

During his speech to the UN General Assembly last week, Prime Minister Joseph Muscat spoke on how Malta “assumed responsibilities and obligations in the context of overseas development assistance with developing countries”.

A meeting between Dr Muscat and Somali Deputy Prime Minister Fawzia Yusuf Adam was held during last week’s UN General Assembly. Dr Muscat made a formal request to establish diplomatic relations with Somalia.



 





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