Difference between revisions of "Department For International Development"

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Since 2010, DFID will only provide aid directly to governments once they are satisfied that those governments share a commitment to these partnership principles, including :respect for human rights (from political freedoms to the rights of minorities including (LBGT) and religious minorities).<ref>http://www.dfid.gov.uk/What-we-do/How-UK-aid-is-spent/how-we-decide-where-aid-is-spent/</ref>
 
Since 2010, DFID will only provide aid directly to governments once they are satisfied that those governments share a commitment to these partnership principles, including :respect for human rights (from political freedoms to the rights of minorities including (LBGT) and religious minorities).<ref>http://www.dfid.gov.uk/What-we-do/How-UK-aid-is-spent/how-we-decide-where-aid-is-spent/</ref>
  
DFID is a member of [[ILGA]]
+
DFID is a member of [[ILGA]].
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==

Revision as of 18:28, 21 September 2012

The Department for International Development (DFID) is a British Government department. It was set up in 1997, with a main aim of fighting world poverty.

Alan Duncan is a Minister of State (junior minister) at DFID, with special responsibility for Asia, the Middle East, the Caribbean and British Overseas Territories.

Since 2010, DFID will only provide aid directly to governments once they are satisfied that those governments share a commitment to these partnership principles, including :respect for human rights (from political freedoms to the rights of minorities including (LBGT) and religious minorities).[1]

DFID is a member of ILGA.

External links

http://www.dfid.gov.uk/

References

  1. http://www.dfid.gov.uk/What-we-do/How-UK-aid-is-spent/how-we-decide-where-aid-is-spent/