The question is whether such a government is a worthy recipient of British
taxpayers’ money. Our aid does not go to Ethiopia’s security forces, of
course, nor to the secret police who create such fear. Yet British funding
for schools and hospitals could release resources for Mr Hailemariam to
spend on repression. Foreign aid will always give recipient governments more
discretion over what to do with their own money. DfID would say that British
aid is, for example, helping almost two million Ethiopian children to go to
school – and that is a fair point. But DfID’s budget jumped by 32 per cent
between 2012 and 2013 – the biggest percentage increase ever enjoyed by any
Whitehall department in peacetime history. DfID has failed to allay the
suspicion that its officials are more concerned with spending this money
than guarding against possible unintended consequences. Sadly, that risk is
greater in Ethiopia than almost anywhere else.
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* Telegraph View represents the editorial opinion of The Daily Telegraph and The Sunday Telegraph.
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* Telegraph View represents the editorial opinion of The Daily Telegraph and The Sunday Telegraph.
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