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| ZAMBIA:
Debt campaigners demand government transparency

14th
November, 2001. JOHANNESBURG- Zambian debt activists are questioning
the transparency of government social spending under the donor-supported Highly
Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) initiative. So far, the government has
made two allocations this year to rural development and health from funds saved
under HIPC debt relief. However, according to the debt group Jubilee-Zambia, it
has failed to announce how much money was disbursed, and what precisely it was
spent on. Under the HIPC initiative, which aims to make debt repayment
"sustainable" for poor countries, Zambia was granted US $3.8 billion as total
debt relief from all its creditors in December 2000. However, the data is not
clear on what Zambia will save on annual debt repayments under the programme.
According to the International Monetary Fund (IMF), without HIPC, Zambia's
debt service would have "more than doubled" in 2001 to over US $420 million.
The government estimates service payments at US $158 million for 2001, while
debt campaigners suggest the figure would be in the region of US $170 million.
Nevertheless, despite "frontloading" of Zambia's debt relief by donors to reduce
obligations over the next few years, Oxfam points out that Zambia spends three
times as much on debt servicing as it does on primary education Under
the terms of HIPC, Zambia is committed to channeling its additional resources
into the social sector as part of a poverty reduction plan. A local HIPC monitoring
team, in which civil society groups have been invited by the ministry of finance
to witness disbursements, in theory is intended to provide accountability over
the process. However, according to Charity Musamba of Jubilee-Zambia,
who attended the first meeting of the monitoring team last week, government officials
and debt activits reached deadlock on the role of the inspection mechanism.
She alleged that the team was viewed by finance ministry officials as a "rubber
stamp", without the ability to examine the proposed projects for funding, participate
in priority setting, or audit expenditure. "What government considers priorities
may not be something that we as civil society can give support to," Musamba said.
What concerns debt campaigners is that savings under HIPC could be squandered.
While auditing is by act of parliament the preserve of the Auditor General, Musamba
said civil society was proposing a "special case" as part of a "positive partnership"
to address poverty. "From our side we don't want to go into a process where we
don't have full information, full disclosure," she added. Despite the
deadlock surrounding the monitoring team, Zambian debt campaigners said they would
continue to insist on a more pro-active role in examining HIPC spending.
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