Latest update: 27/05/2011 


G8 pledge $20 billion in aid to support new democracies
G8 leaders voiced support for pro-democracy movements in North Africa and the 
Middle East Friday and pledged a $20 billion aid package for Egypt and Tunisia 
to fund reform efforts following popular uprisings in the two countries.
By News Wires (text)
 

REUTERS - Group of Eight leaders promised $20 billion in aid to new Arab 
democracies on Friday when they met in France to endorse a programme aimed at 
fostering changes sweeping North Africa and the Middle East.
 
Leaders were concluding their annual two-day summit with the launch of a 
partnership for the region that ties aid and development cash to progress on 
democracy and economic reforms by states which have thrown off autocratic 
rulers.
 
The G8 leaders, in the northern resort of Deauville for their annual summit, 
said they "strongly support the aspirations of the Arab Spring as well as those 
of the Iranian people".
 
"The changes under way in the Middle East and North Africa are historic and 
have the potential to open the door to the kind of transformation that occurred 
in Central and Eastern Europe after the fall of the Berlin Wall," the G8 
planned to say in a statement, a copy which was obtained in advance by Reuters.
 
They said special development banks "could provide over $20 billion, including 
3.5 billion euros from the EIB, for Egypt and Tunisia for 2011-2013 in support 
of suitable reform efforts".
 
Britain on Thursday announced a 110 million pound ($175 million) package to 
support the transition to democracy in countries like Tunisia and Egypt. The 
four-year programme, funding out of existing budgets, will support greater 
political participation and strengthen the rule of law, officials said.
 
Prime ministers of Egypt and Tunisia were to meet the leaders of the G8's seven 
Western powers plus Russia on Friday to underscore their need for massive 
international support for economies knocked out of kilter by the popular 
uprisings against long-serving authoritarian leaders.
 
In a report to G8 leaders on Thursday, the International Monetary Fund said the 
external financing needs of oil-importing countries in the Middle East and 
North Africa would top $160 billion over the next three years.
 
The IMF says it can provide around $35 billion to help stabilize countries' 
economies but the bulk of financing will need to come from the international 
community.
 
The World Bank on Tuesday unveiled $6 billion in new funding for Tunisia and 
Egypt, whose revolts have inspired popular uprisings in Yemen, Jordan, Morocco 
and Syria, and left Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi fighting to stay in power.
 
End to violence
 
Revolts in Tunisia and Egypt triggered popular uprisings across the Middle East 
and North Africa, including Yemen, Bahrain and Syria, and left Libyan leader 
Muammar Gaddafi fighting to stay in power. Demands for reform have also been 
heard from Morocco to Saudi Arabia.
 
G8 leaders demanded Gaddafi stop violence against civilians and said he would 
be held to account for alleged war crimes being investigated by the 
International Criminal Court.
 
"Gaddafi and the Libyan government have failed to fulfil their responsibility 
to protect the Libyan population and have lost all legitimacy. He has no future 
in a free, democratic Libya. He must go," the leaders said.
 
U.S. President Barack Obama, speaking after talks with the summit host, French 
President Nicolas Sarkozy, said they were determined to stick with the NATO-led 
intervention in Libya until the crisis there is resolved.
 
"We agreed we have made progress on our Libya campaign but that meeting the 
U.N. mandate of civilian protection cannot be accomplished when Gaddafi remains 
in Libya, directing his forces in acts of aggression against the Libyan 
people," Obama said.
 
"We are joined in resolve to finish the job."
 
On Syria, the heads of state and government said they were "appalled" by the 
killing of peaceful protesters opposed to the rule of President Bashar 
al-Assad, and demanded authorities stop using force against them.
 
They also condemned violence against protestors seeking the removal of Yemen's 
President Ali Abdullah Saleh, and urged him to respect a pledge to stand down.
 
Summit agenda
 
The world's crises forced their way on to the agenda of the Group, whose 
importance has diminished with the rise of emerging economies like China and 
India.
 
The G8 leaders, on Thursday discussed nuclear safety and the global economy, 
noting on Friday in their communique that the recovery was becoming more 
"self-sustained", although higher commodity prices were hampering further 
growth.
 
The pace of world growth could affect the amount countries, many of which are 
implementing austerity measures at home to rein in budget deficits and trim 
public debt, are willing to stump up to help the Arab World's emerging 
democracies.
 
The European Union executive said it had added just 1.24 billion euros of fresh 
grant funding to an existing programme that aims to help its neighbours across 
the Mediterranean.
 
Diplomatic sources said the summit would also back the extension of the mandate 
of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development into North Africa and 
the Middle East. The bank, created after the Cold War to help former Communist 
states become market economies, lends about 9 billion euros a year to projects 
anywhere from Croatia in central Europe to China.




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