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{UAH} Fw: Australia's upheaval, Trump's 'rescission' retreat, and Ebola's 'triple threat:' This week in development





From: Devex Global Development Briefing <info@devex.com>
Sent: 30 August 2018 16:36
To: georgeokello_8@hotmail.com
Subject: Australia's upheaval, Trump's 'rescission' retreat, and Ebola's 'triple threat:' This week in development
 
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Aug. 30, 2018
THIS WEEK'S MUST-READ DEVELOPMENT STORIES
Michael Igoe
By Michael Igoe
The White House abandons a controversial plan to take back aid funding, Ebola responders face a "triple threat," and the United Nations alleges war crimes on multiple continents. This week in development:

The future of Australian foreign aid is in question after an abrupt political shakeup that has recast the country's leadership and downgraded the development minister's status. Facing challenges to his leadership, Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull stepped aside last Friday. The battle to succeed him saw Foreign Minister Julie Bishop — who has overseen a tumultuous period for Australian aid — defeated by former Treasurer Scott Morrison. Instead of pursuing the deputy minister position, Bishop resigned. Amidst the upheaval, Minister for International Development and the Pacific Concetta Fierravanti-Wells also resigned, and her position was downgraded to assistant minister status, casting doubt on the role development will play with the country's new leadership, Lisa Cornish reported for Devex. Bishop leaves behind a mixed legacy of global development leadership. On one hand, she presided over the largest cuts to Australian foreign aid in a generation. On the other hand, she is credited with bringing a focus on innovation and private sector engagement, and with recognizing Australia's role as a "Pacific nation." With experts waiting to see how Australia's new leadership will approach global development, some early statements suggest a greater focus on security and national prosperity.

President Donald Trump's White House abandoned a controversial plan to take back billions of dollars in foreign aid funding that had already been appropriated by the United States Congress. Rumors about an impending "rescission package" had been circulating in the U.S. development community for weeks, pushing aid lobbyists and supporters into a fight with Trump's budget director Mick Mulvaney. The White House plan would have involved freezing a pot of foreign aid funding for a 45-day period. Because this maneuver was expected at the end of the fiscal year, it was unclear whether lawmakers would have been able to unfreeze the money before it expired. In addition to objecting to an apparent attempt to veto foreign assistance funds that Congress had already approved, lawmakers also objected to a seeming violation of their constitutional authority over the U.S. federal budget. Some aid leaders credited Secretary of State Mike Pompeo with helping to prevent the rescission from moving forward, while others cautioned that the White House's decision should not be taken as a sign that the budget battles for U.S. foreign aid are over.

On three consecutive days, the United Nations shined a damning spotlight on three different countries, alleging war crimes in two of them and government "repression and retaliation" in the third. On Monday, a U.N. Fact Finding Mission on Myanmar concluded its year-long investigation with a report accusing the country's security forces of committing genocide against the Rohingya minority, and calling for Senior General Min Aung Hlaing, the commander in chief of Myanmar's army, and other top generals, to stand trial for war crimes in international court. The government of Myanmar has rejected the report and denied any wrongdoing. On Tuesday, a report mandated by the U.N. Human Rights Council concluded that parties to the ongoing conflict in Yemen "have perpetrated, and continue to perpetrate, violations and crimes under international law." The report drew special attention to Saudi and Emirati airstrikes that have killed civilians. On Wednesday, outgoing U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra'ad al-Hussein condemned the Nicaraguan government and paramilitary forces for torturing and killing protesters, and called for the U.N. to take action to hold the perpetrators accountable.

The Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo has not stabilized, the World Health Organization chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said Wednesday, pointing to the challenges of accessing the parts of the country where the outbreak overlaps with ongoing conflict. So far, 75 people have died from the latest Ebola outbreak, with 112 current suspected cases, according to the latest report from DRC's ministry of health. In a statement on Wednesday, the Red Cross described the challenge as a "triple threat" of conflict, community resistance, and increasing cases. "In addition to the increased death toll and the spread of disease to inaccessible areas, we are experiencing fear and anger in some communities against Red Cross teams who come to bury the deceased in accordance with safe and dignified burial protocols," said Balla Condé, head of emergency operations for the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, in a statement.
FROM THE EDITOR
Top picks this week
By Devex
Interactive: Is the latest EuropeAid framework contract old wine in a new bottle?
EuropeAid's new framework contract — or FWC, the European Union's tool for procuring aid implementation service contracts worth up to almost €1 million ($1.15 million) — has just kicked in. There have been significant changes to the scope and structure of the tendering process since the previous FWC. The latest edition, known as "Services for Implementation of External Aid," will last until May 2020, with a probable extension to 2022.

But are the changes to SIEA 2018 just old wine in a new bottle? Here's everything you need to know about this highly competitive tendering process and how it has affected the leading contractors. Also check out our interactive visualization.
5 lessons from humanitarian storytellers
In an era of protracted crises, how are humanitarian communicators working with their teams to tell important stories? Devex Associate Director of Communications Carine Umuhumuza speaks to communications experts at IFRC, the International Rescue Committee, Save the Children, and World Vision to understand the challenges and opportunities for communicators in the humanitarian space.
A social entrepreneur's guide to financing
Increasingly, for-profit social enterprises that seek to serve some of the hardest-to-reach populations are looking to grant funding, not just commercial capital, to finance their impact growth plans. Here's how grants can help for-profits and nonprofits alike fund pathways to scale, and here here's how social enterprises can scale their impact.
Triple threat of stunting, anemia, and obesity poses looming crisis, health experts warn
A preview of what is to come in the "2018 Global Nutrition Report," a multistakeholder report supported by the Food and Agriculture Organization, shows a growing number of people facing a triple burden of malnutrition — stunting, anemia, and obesity. Forty-one countries are dealing with major nutritional challenges in all three categories — an increase of 41 percent from 2017, when 29 countries were found to face the triple burden.
8 things to consider before pursuing a graduate degree
The field of global development places a high value on education and credentials. But pursuing an advanced degree is expensive and time-consuming, and may be one of the bigger decisions you will make in your career. Here are 8 things you should consider before diving back into the books.
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