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BackAid workers urge government to protect them from new national security bill
Aid workers urge government to protect them from new national security bill
يتطور
The Independent World2 g önceسياسة3 dk okuma

Aid workers urge government to protect them from new national security bill

نظرة سريعة

  • Aid agencies and MPs are urging the UK government to amend a new national security bill, warning it could criminalize legitimate humanitarian work in conflict zones.
  • Despite some concessions, concerns remain that the legislation poses legal risks to aid workers operating in dangerous global environments.

ملخص مُنشأ بالذكاء الاصطناعي

لماذا يهم

A new national security bill in the UK has raised concerns among aid agencies and MPs that it could inadvertently criminalize legitimate humanitarian assistance in areas controlled by sanctioned individuals or organisations.

حجم الخط

The government has been urged to take action to protect those undertaking aid work from prosecution under a new national security bill, during what a leading MP has called “one of the most dangerous times in history for humanitarian aid workers.”

The legislation, designed to strengthen the UK’s response to hostile state activity, has prompted warnings from aid agencies that it could inadvertently criminalise legitimate humanitarian assistance in areas controlled by sanctioned individuals or organisations.

Sarah Champion, the Labour chair of parliament’s International Development Committee, welcomed changes to the legislation in the wake of the points raised – including the concession to provide for express defences for humanitarian organisations – but warned they stopped short of removing the legal risks facing aid organisations operating in conflict zones.

As the National Security (State Threats) Bill returns to the House of Commons for debate, Ms Champion said: “We are already at one of the most dangerous times in history for humanitarian aid workers and we must ensure that the government does not make things worse.”

“I am imploring the government to take further action to ensure that we avoid what could be a chilling effect on the activities of humanitarian organisations.”

Ms Champion said she had written to the home secretary, Shabana Mahmood, ahead of earlier stages of the Bill, warning that new offences "may have unintended consequences” for the delivery of humanitarian assistance in complex environments.

She said the International Development Committee had also raised the issue during Commons debates and worked with peers to press the government to amend the legislation.

Last year the committee concluded that aid workers should not face "unnecessary bureaucratic obstacles or legal risks and ambiguity" simply for delivering humanitarian assistance.

The government has argued the existing amendments to the bill strike the right balance between protecting national security and ensuring legitimate humanitarian activity can continue unhindered.

The renewed intervention comes as ministers seek to reassure the international development sector that the UK will remain engaged overseas, despite significant cuts to the aid budget, which mean prioritising international partnerships and organisations over direct country-to-country aid.

Writing for the think tank Chatham House, Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper said the UK must remain an "international champion" on humanitarian crises, development and climate change even "where budgets are lower".

She argued the UK should continue supporting fragile and conflict-affected states while reshaping development policy to treat countries as investment partners "so they can move beyond aid”.

“The world is more dangerous than it has been for decades, and families across the United Kingdom are feeling the impact,” she said, adding that we are facing a storm of geopolitical instability, economic coercion, AI and climate change that is likely to get worse.

As the world changes, we can be a principled architect of what comes next, realistic about challenges, but determined to shape the world for the better,” she said. “That is how we make our country safer, our economy stronger and our people more secure.”

In response to the essay by Ms Cooper, Romilly Greenhill, CEO of Bond, the UK network for Non-governmental organisations (NGOs), said:

"The foreign secretary is right to highlight the UK's role in responding to mounting threats to global stability, and to reaffirm the values of multilateralism, justice and humanitarianism that underpin it.

“Defence, diplomacy and development are three legs of the same stool: together, they protect people at home and abroad from insecurity and uncertainty. We cannot build lasting peace while slashing UK aid programmes that stop conflict taking hold in the first place.

“If the UK government is serious about restoring its reputation on the global stage... it must show the same commitment to international development as it does to diplomacy and defence, with strong leadership at the heart of government."

أسئلة مفتوحة

  • Will further amendments fully protect aid workers?
  • What are the specific consequences for aid operations?
  • How will the government balance security and aid delivery?

مواضيع ذات صلة

This article was originally published by The Independent World.

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المزيد حول هذا الموضوعhumanitarian aid