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There is hope for poor
While G8 deserves praise for its efforts in eradicating poverty, nations such as Italy and France must be goaded to fulfil pledges.
A promise to the poor is particularly sacred. It is an act of grace and great leadership when all efforts are made to keep these pacts, and that is why those Group of Eight (G8) countries that are leading the charge for the poorest, especially for those in Africa, deserve much credit.
But we who praise must also be prepared to censure where it is clearly deserved. It saddens me that great nations such as Italy and France are going in the wrong direction and falling behind with the pledges they made four years ago at the G8 summit in Gleneagles, Scotland.
We must all campaign to encourage leaders at the forthcoming G8 meetings to get back on track and do what is right.
Of course, African development must be driven by African citizens - from all areas of society. But we also need and welcome international support in our struggle against poverty and injustice. That means support from governments, and from citizens in countries such as Italy.
I expect that most of us tend to be deeply distressed - and often devastated - when we look at the news and see what is happening in Darfur, Zimbabwe, and the Congo.
"When are we going to get good news?" we ask. Well, I want to tell you that there is good news from Africa.
When I went to Darfur recently, I was particularly struck by those humanitarian workers who keep going back into an awful situation.
I want to stand up and shout loudly for the fact that there are so many young people who are incredibly idealistic, who do believe that poverty can become history, who believe that it is possible to have a world without war. Evil does not have a free rein. I say that ours is a moral universe, and good will ultimately prevail.
In Africa, in the past decade, 34 million more children are now going to school. This is thanks to the efforts of African leadership and effective aid, including that of G8. It can be hard to imagine 34 million children.
So imagine just one child who can now go to school and receive the gift of education. Give this child the face of a child you know. Give the face a name. It's not about numbers; it's about that child - somebody's son, somebody's brother. It is fantastic that this has happened.
There is also good news in the fight against HIV/Aids. Imagine that you are in a family affected by Aids, your breadwinner received a death warrant, and you watched this person slipping away.
Then she gets anti-retroviral drugs and you see a metamorphosis. We thought our mother was dying, but now she is well enough to go to work. There are three million such individuals. Because aid has been given.
A promise to the poor is particularly sacred. Not keeping that promise is a sin.
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