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Top fisheries scientist wants upper Yangtze dams scrapped

(April 24, 2009) One of China’s top fisheries scientists has warned that further dam construction on the upper Yangtze will drive the region’s rare fish to extinction. Professor Cao Wenxuan, a Sichuan native and senior researcher at the Wuhan-based Institute of Hydrobiology, says government officials ‘know only how to eat the fish and don’t bother about protecting them.’ He wants the government to scrap its plans for more dams and remove those dams already under construction on the upper Yangtze.

 

The False Promise of Gleneagles: Misguided Priorities at the Heart of the New Push for African Development

(April 24, 2009) The Gleneagles Summit, for all its good intentions, gave rise to unrealistic expectations. The heavy emphasis on aid and debt relief made Western actions appear to be chiefly responsible for poverty alleviation in Africa. In reality, the main obstacles to economic growth in Africa rest with Africa’s policies and institutions, such as onerous business regulations and weak protection of property rights.

World Bank lending programme suffers from “material weaknesses” in responding to fraud and corruption

(April 23, 2009) A report on the internal controls of the World Bank’s US $40 billion International Development Association (IDA) has found the current procedures for identifying and preventing fraudulent or corrupt use of aid money to be woefully inadequate. The report is the first of its kind to be done by any international development finance institution.

Moyo’s “Dead Aid” is dead on

Through our Odious Debts Online news service, Probe International has long critiqued and reported on the failures of the international multi-billion-dollar aid industry to help the world’s poorest countries develop, instead creating a cycle of dependency and stagnation. Economist Dambisa Moyo in Dead Aid comes to the same conclusion

Three Gorges dam faces 14.5-billion-dollar cost overrun

(April 16, 2009) China’s Three Gorges Dam, due to be completed in November, is getting bigger every day on all fronts. While officially the government said it has spent 180 billion yuan (26.35 billion dollars) on building the 185-metre dam and a reservoir stretching more than 600 kilometres, local critics and foreign observers said the real figure could be more than twice that amount, and that’s just in the construction phase.