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Zimbabwe Coalition on Debt and Development - ZIMCODD



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Derniers articles :

Le CADTM appelle à la mise en place d’audits de la dette pour lutter contre les fonds vautours - - 28 octobre 2007
2 ans après Gleneagles les promesses non tenues sur la dette et les fonds vautours sapent l’accord du G8 - 8 juin 2007
Stop Vulture Debt Bondage - - March 2007
Des cadavres dans le placard - 9 février 2007
Skeletons in the Cupboard: Illegitimate Debt Claims of the G7 - 9 February 2007
Déclaration sur la dette, Forum social de Nairobi, Kenya - 24 janvier 2007
Declaration On Debt, World Social Forum in Nairobi, Kenya - 24 January 2007
New and old loans in Africa - what role for Parliamentarians? - 8 December 2006
Le CADTM salue l’initiative de la Norvège sur la dette et demande à tous les créanciers d’aller encore plus loin - - 12 octobre 2006
Pour l’annulation de la dette odieuse - - 23 juin 2006
One Year On from Gleneagles, Civil Society Calls on the African Union to Hold G8 to its promises - - 20 June 2006
Cinquantenaire du Club de Paris : ni légitime, ni soutenable - 16 juin 2006


Voir également :


République démocratique du Congo : Pour le CADTM, la RD Congo doit suspendre immédiatement le remboursement de la dette pour faire face à la crise économique mondiale
Sénégal : Appel Africain pour l’arrêt de la fuite des capitaux, le bannissement des paradis fiscaux et judiciaires, le rapatriement des deniers publics détournés et planqués dans les Banques étrangères
République centrafricaine : Le CADTM exhorte tous les créanciers du Nord à annuler totalement et sans condition la dette de la Centrafrique sans gonfler du même coup leur Aide Publique au Développement
Sommets du G8 : Challenge to the G8 Governments
Forums sociaux : Déclaration de la 7ème édition du Forum des Peuples
République démocratique du Congo : Le peuple congolais est floué par le contrat RDC-Chine
Angola : Restitution des fonds publics angolais détournés : complicité entre la DDC et RUAG
FMI et Banque mondiale : Le CADTM pointe les responsabilités des mesures imposées par le FMI et la Banque mondiale dans la catastrophe alimentaire mondiale
République démocratique du Congo : Le CADTM dénonce le poids de la dette dans le budget 2008 de la RDC et soutient la société civile congolaise pour un audit de la dette et des ressources naturelles
Afrique de l’Ouest : Déclaration finale du séminaire sur l’audit de la dette d’Abidjan
Europe/ACP - Accords de Cotonou - APE : Africa-Europe - What alternatives? Final Declaration
Europe/ACP - Accords de Cotonou - APE : Afrique Europe : Quelles alternatives ? Déclaration finale
Afrique Centrale : Déclaration finale du Séminaire International sur l’audit de la dette et des ressources naturelles en Afrique centrale
Libéria : IMF Failing Liberia
Burkina Faso : A l’occasion du vingtième anniversaire de son assassinat, le CADTM salue la mémoire de Thomas Sankara et sa volonté farouche de dire non à la dette


Site(s) web :

Comité pour l’annulation de la dette du Tiers monde (CADTM) :

Jubilee South :
African Forum and Network on Debt and Development (AFRODAD) :
Odious Debts :
Ecological Debt :
International NGO Campaign on Export Credit Agencies (ECA Watch) :
Observatoire international de la dette :
Plate-forme française Dette & Développement :
Dette odieuse :
Action for Southern Africa (ACTSA) :
Alternative Information and Development Centre (AIDC) :
Apartheid Debt and Reparations Campaign :
Coalition des Alternatives Africaines Dette et Développement (CAD Mali) :
Jubilee Zambia :
Uganda Debt Network :
Zimbabwe Coalition on Debt and Development (Zimcodd) :
http://www.zimcodd.org.zw/


Dernier(s) document(s) :

Dette odieuse : à qui a profité la dette des pays du Sud ? - Une brochure de la plate-forme française Dette & Développement - 2 January 2008 (PDF - 2 Mb)
Skeletons in the Cupboard: Illegitimate Debt Claims of the G7 - By Eurodad - 9 February 2007 (PDF - 727.9 kb)
Enough is enough: The debt repudiation option - A report by Christian Aid - 16 January 2007 (PDF - 834.9 kb)
Menons l’enquête sur la dette ! - Un manuel pour des audits de la dette du Tiers Monde proposé par le CETIM et le CADTM - 4 December 2006 (PDF - 1 Mb)
La Loi des créanciers contre les droits des citoyens - rapport de la plate forme française "Dette & Développement" - 23 June 2006 (PDF - 1020.1 kb)
We are the creditors! - Jubilee South’s Response to the G8 Debt Proposal - 30 July 2005 (PDF - 322.2 kb)
Détails machiavéliques : les implications de la propositions du G7 sur la dette - Briefing d’EURODAD aux ONG - 28 June 2005 (PDF - 141.2 kb)
Devilish details: Implications of the G7 debt deal - EURODAD NGO Briefing - 28 June 2005 (PDF - 126.4 kb)

CADTM applauds Norway’s initiative concerning the cancellation of odious debt and calls on all creditor countries to go even further

12 October 2006
-


Norway recently acknowledged its responsibility in the illegitimate indebtedness of five countries - Ecuador, Egypt, Jamaica, Peru, Sierra Leone - and decided to unilaterally cancel part of its claims on these countries (amounting to euro 62 million).

From 1976 to 1980, Norway exported 156 ships to countries in the South for a total cost of euro 440 million - not to support their development but to come to the aid of its own ailing naval industry. Such exports relied on loans that the countries concerned had received from the Norwegian Guarantee Institute for Export Credits (GIEK). Today Norway acknowledges that this export campaign was a failure in terms of development policy. It is still a creditor for 7 of those 21 countries (the 5 mentioned above, plus Burma and the Sudan) while these debts have brought nothing to the respective populations but poverty, unjustified debt and misappropriation of funds.

In Ecuador for instance, a study carried out by the Center for Economic and Social Rights (CESR) and the Commission for Civil Control of Corruption (CCCC) revealed that the initial debt to buy the ships was a private debt of USD 13.6 million but that it became a public debt of USD 50 million illegally taken over by the Ecuador government.

CADTM, which has long militated for recognition of the notion of odious debt, applauds the decision of the Norwegian government to ackowledge its responsibility in the matter of a profoundly illegitimate debt that puts an intolerable burden on the countries concerned. In addition, CADTM is pleased to see that this debt cancellation will not be taken into account in the figures for Norwegian public development aid, contrary to what is practised elsewhere, which seriously distorts the actual amounts allocated by the countries of the South for purposes of development.

CADTM considers that this decision of the Norwegian authorities is the result of the excellent mobilisation and awareness-building work achieved by activists and movements for the abolition of the debt in the countries concerned, especially in Norway and Ecuador.

CADTM observes with satisfaction that Norway is for once breaking with the solidarity of member countries of the Paris Club (an informal group of 19 rich creditor countries) by deliberately acting unilaterally. In this way, Norway demonstrates that it is possible to make real progress as regards the debt by refusing to remain within the Paris Club framework, in which the indebted countries remain isolated in the face of a united front of major powers. Unfortunately however, Norway has already made it clear that discussions on the cancellation of the Norwegian debts will again be part of the Paris Club approach in 2007.

Consequently, and following the demonstrations and that have taken place so far this year, CADTM demands no less than the removal of the institutional anomaly which goes by the name of the Paris Club, and which has hindered any fair solution to the debt problem for 50 years.

Finally CADTM calls upon all official creditors to acknowledge their responsibility in the over-indebtedness and underdevelopment of countries in the South, to declare that these debts are odious, and to immediately cancel their total claims upon developing countries.





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