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Massive Foreign Aid to India Continues

RiazHaq

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Foreign Aid Pouring in Resurgent India

In spite of all of the recent news about aid to Pakistan dominating the media, the fact remains that resurgent India has received more foreign aid than any other developing nation since the end of World War II--estimated at almost $100 billion since the beginning of its First Five-Year Plan in 1951. And it continues to receive more foreign aid in spite of impressive economic growth for almost a decade. At the recent G20 meeting, India has asked the World Bank to raise the amount of money India can borrow from the bank for its infrastructure projects, according to Times of India. At present, India can borrow up to $15.5 billion as per the SBL (single borrower limit)in soft loans fixed by the Bank.

After the increase of British aid to $500 million (300 million pounds) a year, India will still remain the biggest recipient of Japan's official development assistance (ODA) in the near future. Since Japan's first ODA to India in 1958, the country has received monetary aid worth Rs 89,500 crore (Rs 895 billion) so far, according to Noro Motoyoshi, Japanese consul general in Kolkata. In 2008, Japan's ODA to India was up by more than 18% compared to 2007 at Rs 6916 crore (Rs 69.16 billion).

Now, there is a BBC report about how India is using some of the British aid amounting to $500 million. It says "Last year Britain gave almost £300m (US$500m) to India in development aid. But India plans to spend more than US$1bn on its space programme next year". Here's the report:

International development aid is one part of the UK budget unlikely to be cut in a squeeze on public finances. But questions are being asked about how aid is used, and which countries need it. India last year got almost £300m from the UK, some of it spent on toilets in the country's financial capital, Mumbai.

The stench from the stagnant, fetid stream of the Queresh Nagar slum in Mumbai hits you as soon as you get out of the car.

The slum itself is bustling and vibrant. There is a line of shops with living quarters above. The stream is behind, the water a murky grey with insects buzzing on top. Some residents have rigged up ****** plastic covers at the back of their homes for privacy. But the children scamper around using the stream, or whatever ground they can find on the disused rail track behind, for a toilet.

"We have to live in these conditions," says La La Nawab Ali, who is showing me around.

"What can we do? You can see the state of it. This is Mumbai."

In another slum at Munjul Nagar, residents show letters, many signed with thumb prints, asking the authorities to finish building a toilet block that has been left half-finished. A similar stench pervades the air.

"It's an extremely difficult and helpless situation," explains Prasad Shetty, an urban planning consultant. "It's an extremely embarrassing undignified demeaning kind of experience for them."

Most of the funding for the sanitation project initially came from the World Bank and was then was taken over by the Mumbai government.

A small amount of British aid goes from the UK Department of International Development (DFID) through charities in England and India, mainly to train people to maintain their community toilet blocks. But many in the slums say they know little or nothing about it.

"You foreign people from over there, you keep on sending so much money," says one angry slum resident. "But the poor person sees nothing."

No water

Central to the scheme is building blocks of public toilets that can be used by the millions of people presently living with no sanitation.

Most of the blocks built so far work, but evaluators say there have been problems with about a third of them. Some have been built with no water supply. Some are not being maintained. One in the Queresh Nagar slum had to be pulled down because it was unsafe. The one in the Munjul Nagar slum has been left half-built because of objections from a developer.

"And somebody even sells the toilets," explained Jockin Arputham, founder of the National Federation of Slum Dwellers. "Sometimes they might have been sold to somebody for a premium."



BBC News - Should the UK fund toilets in Mumbai slums?

Haq's Musings: Foreign Aid Continues to Pour in Resurgent India
 
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Yup the situation in Mumbai and most other rapidly developing cities is the same.

This is mainly because of
1.Unplanned urban development.
2.People moving from villages to cities with a hope of a better life
3.Drought and famine in most villages.
4.Corruption in the public services e.t.c.

The P.O.V of the thread has been discussed to death in a lot many threads and the answer is simple.

There is change, There is progress but it is slow. Thats democracy and India is no special case


But we are very thankful for the aid and i bet it wont be given if we don't deserve it :cheers: :toast_sign:
 
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Man did not get it same person starts thread with same topic again, why?
 
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Foreign Aid Pouring in Resurgent India

In spite of all of the recent news about aid to Pakistan dominating the media, the fact remains that resurgent India has received more foreign aid than any other developing nation since the end of World War II--estimated at almost $100 billion since the beginning of its First Five-Year Plan in 1951. And it continues to receive more foreign aid in spite of impressive economic growth for almost a decade. At the recent G20 meeting, India has asked the World Bank to raise the amount of money India can borrow from the bank for its infrastructure projects, according to Times of India. At present, India can borrow up to $15.5 billion as per the SBL (single borrower limit)in soft loans fixed by the Bank.

After the increase of British aid to $500 million (300 million pounds) a year, India will still remain the biggest recipient of Japan's official development assistance (ODA) in the near future. Since Japan's first ODA to India in 1958, the country has received monetary aid worth Rs 89,500 crore (Rs 895 billion) so far, according to Noro Motoyoshi, Japanese consul general in Kolkata. In 2008, Japan's ODA to India was up by more than 18% compared to 2007 at Rs 6916 crore (Rs 69.16 billion).

Now, there is a BBC report about how India is using some of the British aid amounting to $500 million. It says "Last year Britain gave almost £300m (US$500m) to India in development aid. But India plans to spend more than US$1bn on its space programme next year". Here's the report:

International development aid is one part of the UK budget unlikely to be cut in a squeeze on public finances. But questions are being asked about how aid is used, and which countries need it. India last year got almost £300m from the UK, some of it spent on toilets in the country's financial capital, Mumbai.

The stench from the stagnant, fetid stream of the Queresh Nagar slum in Mumbai hits you as soon as you get out of the car.

The slum itself is bustling and vibrant. There is a line of shops with living quarters above. The stream is behind, the water a murky grey with insects buzzing on top. Some residents have rigged up ****** plastic covers at the back of their homes for privacy. But the children scamper around using the stream, or whatever ground they can find on the disused rail track behind, for a toilet.

"We have to live in these conditions," says La La Nawab Ali, who is showing me around.

"What can we do? You can see the state of it. This is Mumbai."

In another slum at Munjul Nagar, residents show letters, many signed with thumb prints, asking the authorities to finish building a toilet block that has been left half-finished. A similar stench pervades the air.

"It's an extremely difficult and helpless situation," explains Prasad Shetty, an urban planning consultant. "It's an extremely embarrassing undignified demeaning kind of experience for them."

Most of the funding for the sanitation project initially came from the World Bank and was then was taken over by the Mumbai government.

A small amount of British aid goes from the UK Department of International Development (DFID) through charities in England and India, mainly to train people to maintain their community toilet blocks. But many in the slums say they know little or nothing about it.

"You foreign people from over there, you keep on sending so much money," says one angry slum resident. "But the poor person sees nothing."

No water

Central to the scheme is building blocks of public toilets that can be used by the millions of people presently living with no sanitation.

Most of the blocks built so far work, but evaluators say there have been problems with about a third of them. Some have been built with no water supply. Some are not being maintained. One in the Queresh Nagar slum had to be pulled down because it was unsafe. The one in the Munjul Nagar slum has been left half-built because of objections from a developer.

"And somebody even sells the toilets," explained Jockin Arputham, founder of the National Federation of Slum Dwellers. "Sometimes they might have been sold to somebody for a premium."



BBC News - Should the UK fund toilets in Mumbai slums?

Haq's Musings: Foreign Aid Continues to Pour in Resurgent India

Let UK return all the wealth looted during its rule in India for over 300 years, Im sure there wont be any need for aid for the next 200 years.
By the way, India invests more in UK now and not vice versa...
 
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Is this a Joke Thread ? If someone talks of massive then the figures should be in billions and trillions and not millions.
 
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Riaz is this the same thing we are discussing it in another thread and people here clearly pointed out they were not "AID" but "loans",which we have to pay afterwards with interest..and British Aid is not for the government but for the NGO organisations working here in India?? Then whats the purpose of opening up another thread about it??how many more threads are you intend to open ?
 
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Is this a Joke Thread ? If someone talks of massive then the figures should be in billions and trillions and not millions.

Read the post again and do the math. The total ODA from donor countries (UK, Japan, Others, UN agencies and IFIs adds up to billions of dollars. But the trillions in aid will remain a dream for you.
 
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Riaz is this the same thing we are discussing it in another thread and people here clearly pointed out they were not "AID" but "loans",which we have to pay afterwards with interest..and British Aid is not for the government but for the NGO organisations working here in India?? Then whats the purpose of opening up another thread about it??how many more threads are you intend to open ?

ODA, or official development assistance, includes grants and soft loans to Indian government, not NGOs.

The aid flowing to thousands of NGOs in India is separate from ODA, and that adds up to billions of dollars as well.
 
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ODA, or official development assistance, includes grants and soft loans to Indian government, not NGOs.

The aid flowing to thousands of NGOs in India is separate from ODA, and that adds up to billions of dollars as well.

For god sake read whats in the links provided in your blog..ODA assistance is loans ..i said this before in another thread of you about the same matter..loans are meant to be paid back..whats the purpose of running in circles??There is no way a loan can be an AID how ever you tried to twist the facts..You are just misleading people around here..What are you trying to proove with it?Pakistan is better than India?is it going to change any ground reality or conditions in your country man?
 
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Yes, you pay for your weapons by starving half of your children, and by having 270 million illiterate adults, the world's largest population of illiterates.

Haq's Musings: India Tops in Illiteracy and Defense Spending

haqi numa tata............

read this news .......

The ******* grains at Sirhind underlines the irony of Mohinder Singh's existence, a wheat farmer who lives close by and has had to borrow money to put food on the table.

"The government has left the stock here for so long, it's *******. It should give the grains to poor people like us. We worked hard to grow this grain.", says Mohinder Singh.

On Wednesday NDTV had reported that in hundreds of granaries like this in Punjab, the Government of India has stored grains procured from farmers for over three years about 72 lakh metric tonnes.

Ninety per cent of it lies in the open for lack of storage space.

According to estimates, wheat grains worth up to Rs. 800 crore are *******.

Punjab's ******* food mountain 2007-2010

72 lakh metric tonne wheat grain stored
65 lakh metric tonnes wheat grain lying in the open
Rs. 500 crore to Rs. 800 crore worth wheat grain *******
Grains grown with the sweat of farmers like Mohinder and Hardev Singh, grains on which the government itself has spent thousands of crores in subsidies, grains that could have at least helped lakhs of poor farmers pushed to the edge by unpredictable weather and debt are now a glaring metaphor for India's agrarian neglect.

"The government doesn't care for farmers.", says Farmer Hardev Singh.

Farmers in Punjab are feeling let down. Many of them borrow money to feed their children and the scene of ******* food grains certainly is quite disheartening for them.

http://www.ndtv.com/news/india/punjab-surplus-*******-grain-a-ghastly-contrast-18128.php

we can feed Pakistan too for free.

But economy will suffer if we will give free food to everyone.
even Denmark throw surplus milk to sea but dont give it in charity.
:blah::blah::blah:

now dont troll this and that.................and stop posting nonsense.
 
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haqi numa tata............

read this news .......

The ******* grains at Sirhind underlines the irony of Mohinder Singh's existence, a wheat farmer who lives close by and has had to borrow money to put food on the table.

"The government has left the stock here for so long, it's *******. It should give the grains to poor people like us. We worked hard to grow this grain.", says Mohinder Singh.

On Wednesday NDTV had reported that in hundreds of granaries like this in Punjab, the Government of India has stored grains procured from farmers for over three years about 72 lakh metric tonnes.

Ninety per cent of it lies in the open for lack of storage space.

According to estimates, wheat grains worth up to Rs. 800 crore are *******.

Punjab's ******* food mountain 2007-2010

72 lakh metric tonne wheat grain stored
65 lakh metric tonnes wheat grain lying in the open
Rs. 500 crore to Rs. 800 crore worth wheat grain *******
Grains grown with the sweat of farmers like Mohinder and Hardev Singh, grains on which the government itself has spent thousands of crores in subsidies, grains that could have at least helped lakhs of poor farmers pushed to the edge by unpredictable weather and debt are now a glaring metaphor for India's agrarian neglect.

"The government doesn't care for farmers.", says Farmer Hardev Singh.

Farmers in Punjab are feeling let down. Many of them borrow money to feed their children and the scene of ******* food grains certainly is quite disheartening for them.

http://www.ndtv.com/news/india/punjab-surplus-*******-grain-a-ghastly-contrast-18128.php

we can feed Pakistan too for free.

But economy will suffer if we will give free food to everyone.
even Denmark throw surplus milk to sea but dont give it in charity.
:blah::blah::blah:

now dont troll this and that.................and stop posting nonsense.

If what you say is true, then why are half of Indian children malnourished? Why does India top the world huger charts, according to World Hunger Index?

There is widespread hunger and malnutrition in all parts of India. India ranks 66th on the 2008 Global Hunger Index of 88 countries while Pakistan is slightly better at 61 and Bangladesh slightly worse at 70. The first India State Hunger Index (Ishi) report in 2008 found that Madhya Pradesh had the most severe level of hunger in India, comparable to Chad and Ethiopia. Four states — Punjab, Kerala, Haryana and Assam — fell in the 'serious' category. "Affluent" Gujarat, 13th on the Indian list is below Haiti, ranked 69. The authors said India's poor performance was primarily due to its relatively high levels of child malnutrition and under-nourishment resulting from calorie deficient diets.

Haq's Musings: South Asia's War on Hunger Takes a Back Seat
 
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^^^^^^
Mr.Riaz, This is the response I am getting whenever I tried to access your site.:undecided: Your site may contain malwares.Why you are advertising such a dangerous site in defence.pk? :disagree:

This is nonsense! My site has been verified as safe by Norton and MacAfee, the most recognized web security companies.
 
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no one visits his blog so he's using a popular defense forum to post and feel good.

And i'm sure he used to dance with joy whenever some one replies to his troll threads.

This help him come out of his inferiority complex and sound sleep.

Unable to deal with the data and the arguments I bring out here and on my blog, your sense of desperation is becoming quite obvious.

It's a clear admission that you have lost the argument.
 
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oye hello haqi numa tata,

I knew you were going say this thing...................answer already given .......................have you read last few lines of my last comment.

If you will give free food , that will bring ur economy down.
same case of Denmark which throw tones of milk in sea but dont give it for free.
You write about economy and dont know a sh*t about basic rules of it.
:bunny::bunny::bunny::bunny:
hahahahaha
You are great...............keep the jokes running.

now dare to answer me:devil:

So why is all the free food aid from foreign donors acceptable to you? Would you rather starve your people to death than give them emergency food aid? How callous!
 
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