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Ministers are using aid for Africa to cover up for the disaster of the
wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, MP George Galloway has claimed.
Mr Galloway was accused of sloganising
Mr Galloway told MPs the government was cynically trying to turn around its international
reputation "on the sea of bodies" caused by poverty.
In a Commons debate on this week's G8 summit, the Respect MP said the G8 system
itself had to be overturned.
But minister Kim Howells accused him of "self-righteous paranoia".
Deception charge
Mr Galloway called Tuesday's adjournment debate and delivered his first speech
since winning Bethnal Green and Bow from Labour at the election.
He said Tony Blair and Gordon Brown had been "rumbled" by Make Poverty
History campaigners.
The MP argued the government was wrongly suggesting it was pushing for all debts
from developing countries to be written off.
They had reduced poverty problems to a question of heavily conditional cancellation
of some countries' debts, he said.
"The government are engaged in a carefully calculated deception of public
opinion to try and draw a veil over the disaster in Iraq and Afghanistan,"
he said.
Status Quo
Ministers were trying to "scramble up at least the foot hills of the moral
high ground on the greatest issue facing the world today", said Mr Galloway.
He said: "For me [Blair and Brown] are not the Lennon and McCartney of
world development issues.
"They are the Status Quo and it's a mangy status quo which will do nothing
to resolve the ocean of misery and poverty that exists in the world."
He said the privatisations and the IMF, World Bank, venture capitalists and
the "robber barons" of globalised corporations had left poor countries
strangled by free market reforms.
"We won't make poverty history until we make the G8 and their system history,"
he said, pointing to unfair trade rules.
Sloganising
Mr Galloway added: "The poor countries are poor because the rich countries
became rich in part through making them and keeping them poor.
"Until a seismic shift of wealth is transferred to the people we robbed
then justice will not be done."
But Foreign Office Minister Mr Howells said Mr Galloway was using easy political
sound bites and slogans as a substitute for proper argument.
He said he could not pre-empt the talks taking place at this week's Gleneagles
summit, chaired by the UK Government.
But he promised the negotiations were detailed and were not a sham.
Mr Howells said: "Our G8 agenda is deliberately ambitious. This government
believes that future generations would not understand if we failed to take this
opportunity for progress."
The minister argued a real difference could be made through the existing international
machinery.
Attempts to encourage a revolution against capitalism had only brought poverty
and war, he suggested.
"We have got to work with what we have got," he said, admitting it
was not perfect.
Mr Howells said dicatators in Africa had not just come from the right-wing
but included left-wingers such as Robert Mugabe in Zimbabwe.
"They're not just American puppets, they were Soviet puppets," he
added.