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Progress for the poor

Jubilee 2000 and debt relief

5,000 delighted debt campaigners gathered in Trafalgar Square in early December having heard Chancellor Gordon Brown announce that Britain will no longer take debt money from 41 of the world's poorest countries.

Speaking at a rally organised by Jubilee 2000, the Chancellor said: 'Because poverty is so great and the need is so urgent, neither you nor I want the richer countries to benefit any more from the debts of these poorest countries. So I can tell you that I will renounce our right to receive any benefit from the historic debt owed by all the 41 most-indebted countries. From today, all debt payments received by us will be held in trust for poverty relief, paid when poverty reduction plans are agreed and backdated to this day.'

The Chancellor outlined the progress made so far. The IMF and World Bank have committed that 20 countries have debt relief by the end of 2000. This will lead to over £600 million in debts to the UK being written off, benefiting 200 million people. But for the 21 countries still to secure debt relief because of civil wars, external conflicts, or the absence of a poverty-reduction programme, Britain will backdate 100% debt relief to December 2 2000. All payments will be held in trust for the day that they become eligible for debt relief.

The event, organised by Jubilee 2000, entitled 'The world will never be the same again', was a moving celebration of the achievements of the Jubilee 2000 Coalition, which closed at the end of December, having reached its millennium deadline.

Following a march past the Treasury and Downing Street, the torch-lit rally was addressed by speakers including Jubilee 2000's director, Ann Pettifor, and Bob Geldof. Ann Pettifor said: 'In just four years of campaigning, the Jubilee 2000 movement has transformed the global debate on debt and forced creditors to start addressing the debt crisis. But we all know we still have so much more to do. We cannot rest until the chains of debt are broken.'

Jubilee 2000 is backed by Tearfund and other evangelical organisations.