A True Friend Indeed: Canada gives $272m to Bangladesh and Indo-Pacific Amidst USAID’s Fund Cut
Canada is supporting projects that will focus on gender equality, sexual and reproductive health and rights for women and girls, along with improved access to inclusive education and skills training.
Canada unveiled $272.1m in new funding for foreign aid projects in Bangladesh and the Indo-Pacific region, Canada’s Minister of International Development, Ahmed Hussen said.
“Canada continues to fiercely strengthen our long-lasting friendship with Bangladesh and the wider Indo-Pacific region through our long-standing people-to-people ties,” Hussen said in a statement. “By supporting vulnerable communities’ healthcare services, empowering women and addressing climate change, we are creating a brighter tomorrow for the global community.”
The money, alongside the contributions of other foreign partners and donors, will help fund 14 different projects in both Bangladesh and other countries in the Indo-Pacific, says Global News.
The federal Liberal government’s move highlights a dramatically different Canadian approach to foreign development assistance compared to American Republican President Donald Trump’s government, which halted funding through the United States Agency for International Development (USAID).
Trump and his new government efficiency czar, businessman Elon Musk, froze US foreign aid for 90 days after he took power, shutting down aid programmes around the world and triggering furloughs of thousands of employees inside the government and among its contractors.
American foreign aid workers and supporters have challenged Trump’s moves in court, saying the president exceeded his legal and constitutional authority when he effectively dismantled a federal agency whose spending was authorised by the US Congress.
The Canadian government aid was personally announced by Hussen and British Columbia Liberal Member of Parliament Parm Bains at a Vancouver event attended by leaders of the Bangladeshi community, just weeks before the Liberal government could call a spring election with a new leader.
The Bangladeshi-Canadian community now includes more than 100,000 people, the federal government estimates.
Source: TBS
Picture Credit: Facebook/High Commission Of Canada To Bangladesh