IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser.

Bono says G-8 are not fulfilling Africa promise

The world’s biggest industrial countries are failing to keep up with financial promises they made to Africa, rocker-activist Bono said Tuesday, calling a new progress report “a cold shower” for the Group of Eight.
U2 lead singer Bono and German singer Groenemeyer address a news conference to present the DATA 2007 report in Berlin
U2 lead singer Bono and German singer Herbert Groenemeyer address a news conference to present the DATA 2007 report in Berlin on Tuesday.Fabrizio Bensch / Reuters
/ Source: The Associated Press

The world’s biggest industrial countries are failing to keep up with financial promises they made to Africa, rocker-activist Bono said Tuesday, calling a new progress report “a cold shower” for the Group of Eight.

G-8 members in 2004-2006 contributed less than half the amount needed to make good on promises to double Africa aid to $50 billion by 2010, according to a report released by DATA — Debt, AIDS, Trade, Africa — an advocacy group founded by Bono, the 47-year-old frontman for Irish band U2.

“The G-8 are sleepwalking into a crisis of credibility. I know the DATA report will feel like a cold shower, but I hope it will wake us all up,” he said.

Money that gets there helps
Bono is urging German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who chairs a G-8 summit in Germany next month, to ensure that members contribute what they said they would.

The report shows the G-8 increased aid by $2.3 billion but says they need to increase aid by an additional $3.1 billion to substantially help the people of Africa.

“These statistics are not just numbers on a page,” Bono said. “They are people begging for their lives, for two pills a day, a mother begging to immunize her children, a child begging not to become a mother at the age of 12.”

The DATA report said aid money that does arrive has an effect. “Every day 1,450 Africans living with AIDS are put on lifesaving drugs,” the organization said, and 20 million African children are going to school for the first time, thanks in part to debt cancellations and aid increases.

Still, Bono warns that insufficient increases in aid could reverse progress already made. DATA says the G-8 must contribute $7.4 billion this year alone to reach its goal. If Germany makes good on its promises to help Africa, he said, the other G-8 members will do the same.

Britain and Japan have contributed most of the aid increase so far, it said.