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    FCRA registration certificate validity extended

    There is some good news on the last day of 2021. The validity of FCRA registration certificate has been extended today.

    There is some good news for NGOs receiving foreign funds — the validity of their FCRA registration certificate has been extended today.

    Validity of FCRA registration certificates (mandated under the Foreign contribution regulation Act 1976) of NGOs has been extended up to 31 March 2022, according to a document accessed from India’s Ministry of Home Affairs. This decision applies to organisations that have applied for the renewal of their FCRA certificate on the FCRA portal between 29 September 2020 and 31 March 2022 or till the date of disposal of the renewal application.

    The government order has been issued to aid NGOs whose FCRA registration certificates are due to expire by 31 March 2022, provided that these organisations have applied for renewal on FCRA portal before the expiry of the certificate of registration.

    Organisations with an expired FCRA certificate “shall not be eligible either to receive the foreign contribution or utilise the foreign contribution received” by them, the communication says.

    The notice informs that in case of refusal of the application for renewal of certificate of registration, the validity of the certificate “shall be deemed to have expired on the date of refusal”.

    While the government’s communication keeps FCRA registered organisations on the wrong side of the government on their heels, because their applications for renewal can be disposed at the will of the government.

     

    Image: Aaradhana Kohli 

    Myanmar: EU slams junta for killing aid workers

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    The chorus for action against Myanmar’s military junta is increasing following the Christmas Eve killing of aid workers attached to Save The Children. Now, the European Union has called for an embargo on arms sold to Myanmar.

    Two Save the Children staff were among some 35 people killed by military junta troops in eastern Myanmar. The charred remains of the aid workers and civilians were found by pro-democracy rebels on a highway in Kayah state where they have been fighting forces that seized power in a February coup.

    Josep Borrell, EU’s high representative for foreign affairs and security policy spoke also of the need to hold the ruling military junta accountable for “the appalling act of violence“.

    EU has in place targeted sanctions on the Myanmar’s ruling military leaders and has ceased financial assistance to the country.

    Breach of international humanitarian law

    Save’s CEO Inger Ashing insisted that violence against innocent civilians including aid workers is intolerable. “This senseless attack is a breach of international humanitarian law,” she said.

    International Committee of Red Cross (ICRC), the harbingers of International Humanitarian Law, have yet to react to the latest killings of civilians in Myanmar.

    Myanmar’s state media that answers to the army too put out reports about the incident, saying soldiers had fired on “terrorists with weapons”. But the state media did not make any mention about the civilians and children who got caught in the cross-hairs.

    The statement released by Save the Children read that the two deceased staff members were returning from helping a nearby community when they were caught up in the attack.

    Myanmar is experiencing an unprecedented humanitarian and human rights crisis, according to an appeal released by UNICEF. Multiple challenges, including a political crisis, escalating conflict and violence, the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, climate-related disasters, rising poverty and a collapse in public services, have left an estimated 14.4 million people, including 5 million children, in need of humanitarian assistance.

    Calls for an arms embargo

    A June resolution moved before the UN security council to prevent arms shipments to the country was vetoed by China, Russia and India.

    Save the Children’s Ashing called on the UN Security Council to investigate the incident and its member states to impose an arms embargo on Myanmar. She also asked the UN to limit junta air strikes on towns in the area.

    Her statement found an echo in UN Secretary of State, Antony Blinken, who said that “The targeting of innocent people and humanitarian actors is unacceptable.”

    The calls came after United Nations under-secretary-general Martin Griffiths on Sunday said that he was “horrified” by the reports. He had demanded the Myanmar government carry out an investigation into the incident.

    On Thursday, Borrell called for increased international preventive action. “The EU also stands ready to impose further sanctions against the military regime,” his statement read.

    Save the Children, has a staff of 900 in different locations around Myanmar. The organisation pulled out of the Kayah state and several other regions after shootout incident.

     

    The featured image is a representative one from UNHCR.

    Release of tenth installment of PM-KISAN to be key feature of Prime Minister’s new year day itinerary

    A function to mark the release of the tenth installment of PM-KISAN funds will be a key feature of Prime Minister’s new year day itinerary

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi will address farmers on 1 January and announce the relases of the tenth installment of funds for farmers under the PM-KISAN scheme. He will also release funds to Farmer Producer Organisations.

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi will release the tenth installment of financial benefit under Pradhan Mantri Kisan Samman Nidhi (PM-KISAN) scheme on Saturday 1 January 2022 via video conferencing.

    The Prime Minister will also address the nation while announcing the transfer of an amount of over Rs. 20,000 crore to more than 10 crore beneficiaries.

    PM Kisan is a Central Sector scheme entirely funded by the central government. It provides an anual financial grant (or Samman Rashi) of Rs. 6000 to eligible beneficiaries, payable in three equal installments of Rs.2000. The fund is disburssed directly to the bank accounts of the beneficiaries. The scheme has so far transferred a sum of Rs. 1.6 lakh crore to farmers so far since it came into effect three years ago.

    Simultaneously, the Prime Minister will also interact with members of Farmer Producer Organisations (FPOs) during the event. An equity grant of over Rs. 14 crore will be released to about 351 FPOs encompassing more than 1.24 lakh farmers.

    Union Agriculture Minister will also be present on the occasion. (The PIB press release did not mention Union Agriculture Minister, Narendra Singh Tomar by name.)

    Business welcomes PM-KISAN installment

    Interestingly, business chambers have applauded the government for its decision to transfer the PM-KISAN installment. The PHD Chamber of Commerce and Industry tweeted:

    #PHDCCI applauds the #Government for its decision to transfer Rs. 20,000 Crores to the bank accounts of more than 10 crore farmers under the flagship Kisan Samman Nidhi #Scheme on January 1.

    The past year has been a tumultuous one as far as government-farmer relationships go. It was especially marked by the bitter stand-off between the government and farmers protesting the farm laws. Farmer organisations said that the farm laws were against their interests and meant to serve big business. The farm laws were eventually withdrawn with the prime minister regretting an inability to explain and convince the farmers of the benefits of the farm laws.

    Countries with regulations against industrially produced trans fats tripled over the past year

    2021 saw India and Bangladesh tighten the norms for oils, fats and trans-fatty acids in food products. Rules to put a cap on trans-fatty acids in food products were long-awaited. However, neighbouring Pakistan along with Nepal and Bhutan still have to regulate the consumption of the greasy cholesterol.

    In early 2021, India’s Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) put rules into place to eliminate trans-fatty acids, or simply trans fat. Towards the end of the year, the Bangladesh Food Safety Authority too adopted the best-practice policy declared by the World Health Organization (WHO) to regulate the toxic trans-fatty acid in foodstuffs.

    The number of countries with a best-practice in place to pursue a policy to eliminate trans fats now stands at 40.

    With such provisions in place, these countries are protecting 1.4 billion people from the deadly food compound, according to a report released by WHO.

    Around 940 million people living in high-income countries are protected by these policies, but no one living in low-income countries has the same regulatory protection, so far.

    What is trans fat and why is it bad

    Trans fat is an artificial compound that can be found in cakes, cookies, biscuits, packaged foods, cooking oils and spreads. WHO estimates that consumption of these fats cause around 500,000 deaths per year due to coronary heart disease.

    According to the agency, eliminating this product from the global food supply could save lives and reduces the burden on healthcare by preventing heart attacks. The world body has set a global goal for the 194 members states to eliminate trans fats by 2023.

    Progress

    The report notes that, this year alone, best practice policies came into effect in Brazil, Peru, Singapore, Turkey, United Kingdom and the European Union.

    Since May 2020, Bangladesh, India, Paraguay, the Philippines and Ukraine have also upped their protective legislation.

    The countries with the most trans fat in their food supply, however, have yet to give these critical policies a green light.

    Currently, Egypt, Iran, Mexico, Azerbaijan, Ecuador, Pakistan, Republic of Korea, Bhutan, Nepal and Australia are among countries yet to make rules to protect their citizens from trans fats.

    Until 2020, well before India and Bangladesh put their rules for trans fats in place, the five SouthAsian neighbours were among a set of 15 countries accounting for two-thirds of the deaths linked to the substance, the WHO September had said.

    Milestone ‘within reach’

    Launching the report, WHO Director General, Dr. Tedros Ghebreyesus, warned that “the clock is ticking” to accomplish the global goal of eliminating trans fats in the next two years.

    “The first-ever global elimination of a risk factor for noncommunicable diseases is within our reach. All countries must act now to protect their people from this harmful and unnecessary compound”, he argued.

    The report, the third to report progress on this area, highlights encouraging progress in low and lower-middle-income countries.

    Bangladesh, India, the Philippines and Ukraine became the first lower middle-income countries to pass best-practice policies. India’s policy alone covers more than 1 billion people.

    Trans fats and ovarian cancer

    Two years ago, in 2020, scientists at the UN-affiliated International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) had announced the identification of a likely link between ovarian cancer and processed and fried foods containing so-called “transfats”.

    The announcement came at the conclusion of a study covering 1,500 patients suffering from the disease, which is the eighth most common cause of cancer death in women.

    Previous, smaller studies have suggested a link between these industrially manufactured fatty foods and ovarian cancer, but the evidence has been “inconclusive” until now, said IARC’s nutritional epidemiologist, Dr Inge Huybrechts.

     

    Image: Wikimedia 

    Afghanistan receives a consignment of 1800 metric tonnes wheat from Pakistan

    A first consignment of wheat crossed the Afghanistan-Pakistan border at Torkham today.

    An initial consignment of 1,800 metric tonnes of wheat crossed the Afghanistan-Pakistan border-point at Torkham today. It was handed over to Afghan Taliban authorities by Muhammed Shehzad Arbab, a former civil servant who advises prime minister Imran Khan on affairs concerning Afghan-Pakistan border matters.

    The consignment is part of a larger, in kind humanitarian assistance package for the people of Afghanistan. The package, most of which is in the pipeline, includes 50,000 metric tonnes of wheat, winter shelters and medical supplies worth a total of 500 crore Pakistani Rupees.

    Bitter winter and food shortage

    This provision of wheat follows UN reports of some 23 million Afghans facing acute food shortage and hunger are arriving of estimates of the UN Afghanistan. Aid workers fear the winter and food shortages can spiral into an unprecedented food-insecure situation.

    Coincidentally, India today provided Pakistan with a list of logistical contractors and drivers who would transport Indian wheat to Afghanistan. This comes after almost three months of intense negotiations with the Pakistan government because the wheat had to cross the Wagah border and pass through Pakistan on its way to Afghanistan.

    India had announced in October its intent to provide 50,000 metric tones of wheat to the Afghan people to see through a grim, bitter winter following the collapse of the elected Afghanistan government.

     

    Image: Wikimedia   l   Denis Bastianelli, CIRAD

    An optimistic WHO chief hopes 2022 marks the end of COVID’s acute stage

    Hours before 2021 ends, the World Health Organisation director general expressed optimism that the coming year may mark the end of the acute stage of the COVID-19 pandemic. 

    The WHO director general, Tedros Ghebreyesus, reminded that it was two years ago, as people gathered for New Year’s Eve celebrations, that a new global threat emerged.

    Since then, 1.8 million deaths were recorded in 2020 and 3.5 million in 2021, but the actual number is much higher. There are also millions of people dealing with long-term consequences from the virus.

    ‘Tsunami of cases’

    As 2021 ends, the Delta and Omicron have driven cases to record high numbers, leading to spikes in hospitalizations and even lakhs of deaths.

    Tedros, who was addressing a virtual press conference, told journalists that he was “highly concerned” that the more transmissible Omicron, circulating at the same time as Delta, has been leading to “a tsunami of cases.”

    Earlier in the year, during meetings of the world’s biggest economies – the G7 and G20 – WHO challenged leaders to vaccinate 40 per cent of their populations by the end of 2021 and 70 per cent by the middle of 2022.

    That target is way away from being met. 92 out of 194 UN member states have missed the target by miles and there are only hours before 2021 ends.

    Not unexpectedly, Tedros attributed this to low-income countries receiving a limited supply for most of the year and then subsequent vaccines arriving close to expiry, without key parts, like syringes.

    Beyond just a moral shame

    “Forty per cent was doable. It’s not only a moral shame, it cost lives and provided the virus with opportunities to circulate unchecked and mutate”, he said.

    The WHO chief warned that boosters in rich countries could cause low-income countries to again fall short and called on leaders of wealthy countries and manufacturers to work together to reach the 70 per cent goal by July.

    “This is the time to rise above short-term nationalism and protect populations and economies against future variants by ending global vaccine inequity”, he said.

    He set a new goal: “We have 185 days to the finish line of achieving 70 per cent by the start of July 2022,” he said. “And the clock starts now”.

    Successes

    Early on, Tedros acknowledged that beating the new health threat would require science, solutions, and solidarity.

    While elaborating on some successes, such as the development of new vaccines, which he said “represent a scientific masterclass”, the WHO official lamented that politics too often triumphed over solidarity.

    “Populism, narrow nationalism and hoarding of health tools, including masks, therapeutics, diagnostics and vaccines, by a small number of countries undermined equity, and created the ideal conditions for the emergence of new variants”, Tedros said.

    Moreover, misinformation and disinformation, have also been “a constant distraction, undermining science and trust in lifesaving health tools”.

    He highlighted as a case in point that huge waves of infections have swept Europe and many other countries causing those not vaccinated to die disproportionately. He spoke of how those not vaccinated are many times more at risk of dying from either variant.

    Future

    As the pandemic drags on, new variants could become fully resistant to current vaccines or past infection, necessitating vaccine adaptations.

    For Tedros, as any new vaccine update could mean a new supply shortage, it is important to build up local manufacturing supply.

    One way to increase production of lifesaving tools, he said, is to pool technology, as in the new WHO Bio Hub System, a mechanism to voluntarily share novel biological materials.

    Tedros also pointed to the new WHO Hub for Pandemic and Epidemic Intelligence, based in Berlin.

    Finally, the WHO chief called for the development of a new accord between nations, saying it would be “a key pillar” of a world better prepared to deal with the next disease.

    “I hope to see negotiations move swiftly and leaders to act with ambition”, he said.

    Tabled marriage bill in India may add to population decline

    A bill before India’s lawmakers proposes to raise marriageable age for women to 21 years. Already India’s fertility rate has dropped below replacement level. Experts aver that jobs and educational opportunities are needed for young, unmarried women.

    By Ranjit Devraj / SciDev.Net

    India’s new bill to raise the marriageable age for women to 21 years may squeeze the country’s fertility rate, just as a national survey reveals the number of births has already dropped below replacement levels.

    The objective of the bill is to bring about gender parity, rather than reduce India’s population, now standing at 1.4 billion. However, it follows the country’s Fifth National Family Health Survey, released on 24 November, which shows that India’s fertility rate – the average number of children that would be born to a woman over her lifetime – has declined to 2.0 this year.

    It means that, for the first time, fertility in the country is below the replacement rate of 2.1— the level at which a couple is replaced by their offspring, taking into account the risk of death, according to the UN.

    “I would like to present that women’s equality in our country needs to be seen in the age of marriage,” said Smriti Irani, India’s minister for Women and Children Development, introducing the bill in Parliament on 21 December.

    “This amendment gives equality to men and women by allowing both to marry at 21.”

    Raising women’s marrying age would help lower maternal and infant mortality rates, improve the number of female births for every 1,000 male births, and reduce the incidence of teenage pregnancies, stillbirths and miscarriages, the bill says.

    However, it does not mention the potential effect that the legislation may have on fertility and reducing India’s population, the second biggest in the world after China.

    Mira Shiva, a founder member of the People’s Health Movement, a global health network, said: “Several studies have shown that deferment of marriage and childbearing is a sure way to reduce the fertility rate and bring down population numbers, though that may not be the intention of the present bill.”

    Shahabuddin Yaqoob Quraishi, a former Indian civil servant and author of The Population Myth, a book dealing with politically motivated ideas of religion and population growth, said: “The decline in fertility rate to below replacement rate is certainly an achievement, though the original target year was 2010.”

    Forced sterilisation

    India has been trying to curb population growth for decades, and state governments have been given free rein to set up their own fertility reduction programmes, including contraception and focusing on birth spacing, the time between each birth, with the central government providing the bulk of the funding for actual implementation.

    Several major Indian states have passed laws aimed at restricting family size to two children. In July this year, India’s largest state of Uttar Pradesh, with 241 million people, tabled a bill in the assembly to make those with more than two children ineligible for government employment, following the example of Rajasthan, Maharashtra and Madhya Pradesh. Some states also ban those who violate the two-child norm from contesting local elections.

    Fertility reduction, through contraception, has been a policy objective since the 1950s. However, forced sterilisations were resorted to during the 1975—1977 national emergency, a period of political unrest.

    In 2000, a National Population Policy set a goal of reducing the total fertility rate to replacement level by 2010 and achieving a stable population by 2045 “at a level consistent with the requirements of sustainable economic growth, social development, and environmental protection”.

    Quraishi said it was commendable that the sex ratio at birth had risen to 1,020 girls for every 1,000 boys — given the widespread practice of sex selection and female foeticides in India. “It is almost unbelievable that this ratio has been achieved and I do hope that they got the figures right,” he said.

    Quraishi, however, said raising the legal age to 21 for women to marry will likely “end up criminalising many more young people”.

    Underground marriages

    A statement released by the Population Foundation of India, a non-profit, said: “Increasing the legal age at marriage would perhaps accomplish little more than pushing more marriages underground as has been the practice in the past.”

    According to Shiva the bill ignores the fact that for most women in India marriages and childbirth occur in the 18—21 age bracket. She points to the Fourth National Family Healthy Survey which showed that 27 per cent of Indian women in the 20—24 age group were married before the legal age of 18.

    Shiva said the government would need to provide incentives to encourage girls to complete their education and find jobs if the stated objectives of the bill are to be realised.

    “As things stand, the prospects for girls extending their education and finding decent employment are dim — most working women in India are employed in the informal sector, where conditions are exploitative,” she said.

    According to projections in the UN’s World Population Prospects – 2019, India’s population may surpass China’s by 2027 due to ‘population momentum’, a phenomenon caused by a high proportion of people in a population being in the reproductive age group.

    In May, China announced it will allow couples to have three children, after census data showed a steep decline in birth rates and an ageing population.

    With India’s total fertility rates steadily declining, as seen in the Fourth and Fifth National Family Health Surveys, the UN projections may need to be revised, says Shiva.

    This piece has been sourced from SciDev.Net

     

    Picture Copyright: Russell Watkins/Department for International Development, (CC BY 2.0). This image has been cropped.

    Private Players Enter India’s Ayushman Bharat Jan Arogya Yojna Health Insurance Scheme

    Two private players been enrolled to conduct desk medical audits as part of the Jan Arogya Yojana, India’s prestigious public health insurance project. The scheme has so far covered about 17.4 crore beneficiaries against a target of 50 crore beneficiaries.

     

    Two private players have entered India’s Ayushman Bharat Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya scheme (PM-JAY). The agencies have been enrolled by the National Health Authority (NHA) to conduct desk medical audits.

    The two private agencies, Inches healthcare and IQVIA Consulting and Information Services India Pvt Ltd., have been empanelled for an initial period of two years. The agencies are not allowed to sub-contract their work. (The wording of the document uses a mix of the terms empanelment/empanelled and contract.)

    Inches Healthcare Private Limited is a private unlisted company incorporated in 1995. The other company, IQVIA Consulting and Information Services India claims to specialise in providing advanced analytics, technology solutions, and clinical research services to the life sciences industry.

    More private players in the pipeline

    Investigations by OWSA reveal that another six private players have been empanelled for conducting investigation and verification under the PM Jan Arogya Yojana for a period of two years.

    NHA is the apex body responsible for implementing the ambitious flagship public health insurance assurance scheme.

    21 (mostly private) insurance companies were shortlisted earlier in July this year for participation in Insurance Pilots covering ‘Missing middle/non-poor population’. The public sector insurance companies among these included National Insurance Co. Ltd., The New India Assurance Co. Ltd. and The Oriental Insurance Co. Ltd.

    Low enrollment a concern

    Officials in the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare are concerned that the NHA has issued less than 17.4 crore beneficiaries with Ayushman Cards to beneficiaries since the scheme was launched to include 50 crore beneficiaries as part of the National Health Policy in 2017. This number includes 5.85 crore beneficiaries enrolled by the state governments.

    8.3 lakh COVID-19 patients hospitalised under Ayushman Bharat 

    Earlier in December, the government informed Parliament that over 8.3 lakh people infected with COVID-19 were admitted to hospitals across the country under the Ayushman Bharat Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana (AB-PMJAY).

    Much is tucked away in the jargon of the Ayushman Bharat Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya scheme. For example, an Ayushman Bharat health infrastructure mission has been designed to financially augment and strengthen the critical healthcare network for some 50 crore beneficiaries. These include the creation of elaborate diagnostics and treatment facilities, monitoring of diseases and the expansion of existing research institutions that study pandemics.

    The future of an entire generation hangs in the balance

    COVID-19 has upended our world, threatening our health, destroying economies and livelihoods, and deepening poverty and inequalities. It also created the single largest disruption to education systems that the world has ever seen.

    By Yasmine Sherif and Joseph Nhan-O’Reilly

    Schools also play a critical role in ensuring the delivery of essential health services and nutritious meals, protection, and psycho-social support, which means that their closure has imperiled children’s overall well-being and development, not just their learning. At the same time, conflicts continue to rage and the disastrous effects of a changing climate threaten our very existence and are driving record levels of displacement.

    Crisis upon crisis

    128 million children and youth people whose education was already disrupted by conflict and crises have been doubly hit by COVID-19, with the pandemic creating a ‘crisis upon a crisis’. The length and extent of disruption to education systems around the world due to the pandemic has tested the very concept of education in the context of humanitarian crises.

    What does it mean to be dedicated to ‘education in emergencies’ in a world in which 90 per cent of schools were shut due to a global pandemic?

    How do we support children get an education in countries affected by conflict and fragility when in peaceful and stable countries millions of children are at risk of never returning to school?

    Will the push to deliver remedial education for the millions of children who have lost learning over the last two years stretch to helping the three million refugee children who were out of school before the pandemic?

    Breakthrough or breakdown?

    These questions underscore a stark and urgent choice. Do we push for an ambitious and inclusive breakthrough or accept that the pandemic has led to an irreversible breakdown in educational progress and will permanently deny millions of children the opportunity to go to school?

    From Afghanistan to Zimbabwe conflicts, forced displacement, famines, and climate-change-induced floods, fires, and extreme heat, together with COVID-19 have combined to form a fatal cocktail that is robbing children of their education.

    Last week on a visit to Cameroon, Education Cannot Wait met some of the 700,000 children there who are impacted by school closures due to violence. If this alone were not bad enough, just a few days before the visit, four students and a teacher were killed in a targeted attack, and, in a separate heinous incident, a young girl had her fingers viciously chopped off just for trying to go to school.

    Education is a priority for communities caught up in crises

    The bravery and determination of the children of Cameroon is a testament to the priority that crisis-affected communities all across the world place on education. They know that education transforms lives, paving the way to better work, health, and livelihoods. They know that continuing education in a safe place provides a sense of normality, safety, and routine for children and young people whilst building the foundations for peace, recovery, and long-term development among future generations.

    They tell us their education cannot wait. But delivering that quality education to these children remains a persistent challenge.

     

    Yasmine Sherif is Executive Director, Education Cannot Wait
    Joseph Nhan-O’Relly is Executive Director, International Parliamentary Network for Education

    This opinion piece has been sourced from Inter Press Service

    Uneven partnerships could stifle attainment of SDGs

    The 2030 agenda for sustainable development puts emphasis on equal partnerships. But lower-middle-income and low-income countries have fewer partnerships compared to rich nations, a new study finds. The authors of the study recommend that the United Nations must track how existing and new partnerships guarantee equity.

    By Eldon Opiyo / SciDev.Net

    The partnerships of organisations charged with implementing the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) may perpetuate the imbalance in resources between high- and low-income countries, a new study says.

    The 2030 agenda for sustainable development puts equal emphasis on developed and developing countries and demands coherent collaboration across all countries.

    But a study published in the journal ‘Scientific Reports’, found that 60 per cent of the 195 countries involved in SDG partnerships were high- or upper-middle-income countries, with 24 per cent in lower-middle-income and low-income countries having a paltry 16 per cent.

    “Partners from low-income countries participated in fewer partnerships, as compared to partners in all other income categories,” says Malgorzata Blicharska, the study’s lead co-author and an associate professor at Uppsala University in Sweden.

    “This does not reflect the idea, promoted by Agenda 2030, of global partnerships addressing global challenges. It also suggests that low-income countries may not have resources and capacity to get involved in partnerships and, thus, to implement SDGs,” Blicharska explains.

    North-South divide

    Researchers analysed data on 2,876 partnerships gathered by 18th August 2019 involving organisations from 195 countries worldwide including all the countries of Sub-Sahara Africa that report the implementation of the SDGs on the UN’s SDG Partnerships Platform.

    Partners from low-income countries focused more on SDGs 1, 2, 3, 5 and 7 (on poverty, hunger, health, gender equality and energy respectively) than those involving partners from higher income countries, Blicharska says.

    The research, she explains, was motivated by the existence of a North-South divide in access to data and scientific capabilities, with particularly low-income countries having less investment in research and development.

    “This has consequences for how policies of global importance are being set and implemented. We wanted to explore if partnerships to implement the SDGs have been helpful in bridging the North-South divide,” Blicharska adds.

    She emphasises that low-income countries often have no capacity to drive relevant research and to implement action on the ground, leading to situations where northern countries design and drive implementation of policies that may not be best adjusted to southern countries’ needs.

    “For example, in relation to climate change, northern countries that are responsible for 80 per cent of global emissions insist on all countries contributing to emissions reductions and motivate southern countries through directing funding predominantly to mitigation, while what southern countries need most is to focus on adapting to the changing climate,” she explains.

    Asking for a balanced implementation

    Nurudeen Alhassan, research and policy analyst with African Institute for Development Policy in Kenya, says that even though most North-South partnerships on the SDGs have a capacity strengthening component for southern partners, this is not enough as the ideas driving such capacity strengthening programmes are driven and influenced largely by northern partners.

    “The needs and ideas of southern partners with respect to capacity strengthening is not well represented even though they are supposed to be the beneficiaries,” Alhassan explains.

    Alhassan tells SciDev.Net that a balanced implementation of the SDGs between high- and low-income countries is required to achieve true sustainable development. Without a balanced implementation, the SDGs risk missing the opportunity to bridge the existing inequality between high and low-income countries.

    “What is required is a balancing of the interest of high-income countries with the capacity needs of low-income countries. Also, without a balance in partnerships, the resources and capacity required to achieve the targets in SDG 1,2,3,4,5 and 7 which disproportionately affect low-income countries may not be adequate,” he says.

    He adds that the study provides evidence for governments and institutions in Africa, Asia and Latin America to advocate for equitable partnerships in the implementation of SDGs.
    The way forward is for the United Nations to establish a mechanism to track partnerships and ensure that existing partnerships and new partnerships are designed in such a way as to guarantee equity, he adds.

    This piece has been sourced from SciDev.Net