(February 10, 2006) Norway plays a key role in efforts to cancel odious debt," says Christian Aid’s Jonathan Glennie. The government and opposition are both open to supporting poor countries repudiate their debt.
Declaration on debt from the World Social Forum
(January 24, 2007) A Declaration on Debt drafted by participants at this year’s World Social Forum in Nairobi, Kenya, last month calls on governments and lenders in the global North to examine loans they have extended to countries in the South and take responsibility for illegitimate debts.
Time to cancel Kenya’s crippling debts
(January 23, 2006) That Kenya’s external debt needs to be cancelled is long overdue. As noted recently by Cabinet ministers and Prof Jeffery Sachs of the United Nations, this debt is crippling the country to the point that Kenya’s ability to meet the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) is not just difficult, but it is virtually impossible.
US legislators oppose debt deal
(January 9, 2006) Some members of the United States Congress have welcomed the debt deal between Nigeria and the Paris Club of creditors whereby Nigeria pays $12.4 billion in return for an $18 billion debt cancellation, but strongly urged the US not to collect its share of the debt from Nigeria.
American lawmakers ask govt to return Nigeria’s debt repayment
(January 9, 2006) A group of US lawmakers have called on the American government to return to Nigeria Washington D.C’s share of the $12.4 billion Abuja is supposed to repay to its creditors.
US lawmakers call Nigerian debt ‘odious’
(January 7, 2006) Anti-debt campaigners and some U.S. lawmakers are calling on the Bush administration to return debt arrears owed by Nigeria and to let the African nation spend the funds on health and education through a World Bank-sponsored fund.
Legislators to Bush administration: let Nigeria spend money on health, not debt
(January 5, 2006) “Much of Nigeria’s debt can be considered odious given the fact that the original loans were made to authoritarian regimes – many of which were then looted while interest and penalties accumulated.”
Fine words but corruption soars
(January 5, 2006) Corruption deals in Africa are getting bigger. The crooks are getting smarter and doing ever greater damage to Africa’s economies – sucking out resources meant for health, education and clean water.
Cuba waging fight against corruption
(January 5, 2006) Some predict that the anti-corruption campaign will be a watershed in the history of the Cuban Revolution.
China launches site to report corruption
(January 5, 2006) China is putting its marathon anti-graft crackdown online, launching a Web site for the public to report corrupt officials.
Bono aid is making Africa sick
(January 1, 2006) Andrew Mwenda’s position echoes the concerns of an opinion piece written earlier this year by href=”http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2092-1964947,00.html”, the travel writer and novelist. Theroux, who worked as a Peace Corps teacher in Malawi during the early 1960s, maintains that despite years of foreign aid the once promising country of Malawi is now a failed state.
Congress should investigate the United Nations tsunami relief effort
(December 30, 2005) A recent investigation by the Financial Times has raised serious questions regarding the U.N.’s handling of the tsunami relief effort, in particular the way in which it has spent the first $590 million of its $1.1 billion disaster.
Iraq wins crucial IMF accord, $14 bln debt swap
(December 23, 2005) The $685 million IMF standby credit arrangement was the fund’s first ever with Iraq and is designed to support the nation’s economic program over the next 15 months.
Switzerland cancels 80% of its Iraqi debt
(December 22, 2005) Switzerland has announced it has cancelled the equivalent of $US230 million of Iraqi debt, amounting to 80% of its claims towards Iraq.
IMF clears debt relief for 19 countries
(December 22, 2005) The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has agreed to cancel $3.3-billion owed by 19 of the world’s poorest countries, after reports that it was back-tracking on the debt-relief plan sparked an outcry.


