Draft International Development Association (Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative) (Amendment) Order 2022 Draft International Development Association (Twentieth Replenishment) Order 2022 Debate

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Department: Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office

Draft International Development Association (Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative) (Amendment) Order 2022 Draft International Development Association (Twentieth Replenishment) Order 2022

Richard Graham Excerpts
Monday 31st October 2022

(1 year, 6 months ago)

General Committees
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Richard Graham Portrait Richard Graham (Gloucester) (Con)
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I will contribute two quick thoughts. First, I echo what has been said by several people: it is great to see my right hon. Friend the Member for Sutton Coldfield back in a place that he knows so well.

Secondly, the hon. Member for Birmingham, Edgbaston made a point of signalling her party’s enthusiasm for re-separating what was the Department for International Development from the Foreign and Commonwealth Office—that is, separating out what is now the combined Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office. As my right hon. Friend will know, some 36 years ago, as a young first secretary at the British high commission in Nairobi, I was responsible for small aid projects. One thing that I quickly learned at that time, when ODA was part of the FCO, was that structures are much less important than actually doing the business required.

Page 4 of the explanatory notes on the draft International Development Association (Twentieth Replenishment) Order 2022 talks about the financing needed across east and southern Africa, with particular emphasis on starving people in Ethiopia, Somalia and the horn of Africa in general. It is incredibly important to be able to use a hub such as Kenya as the place from which a lot of help can be directed. In that context, it is even more important that the work being done on international development should be well co-ordinated and come under the leadership of our high commissioner in Nairobi—exactly as it used to when I worked in our high commission there all those years ago.

I urge my right hon. Friend to focus on what really matters—getting the right help to the right people, at the right time and in the right way—rather than on structures and reorganising and separating Departments. That is not, and should not, be the focus of His Majesty’s Government.