Over 7,000 veterans of the Commonwealth who served the British
Armed Forces will receive two meals a day through UK aid,
International Development Secretary Penny Mordaunt confirmed today.
The programme will be delivered through the Royal Commonwealth
Ex-Services League, a charity which has been supporting those such
veterans who served The British Crown for...Request free trial
Over 7,000 veterans of the Commonwealth who served the
British Armed Forces will receive two meals a day through
UK aid, International Development Secretary confirmed today.
The programme will be delivered through
the Royal Commonwealth
Ex-Services League, a charity which has been
supporting those such veterans who served The British
Crown for almost 100 years.
The new Department for International Development (DFID)
programme will provide regular cash transfers to
Commonwealth veterans and their widows and widowers in
more than 30 countries to prevent them from going
hungry.
Secretary of State for International Development
said:
We owe a tremendous amount to these Commonwealth
Veterans. The British public would be shocked to know
that those who have served alongside our Armed Forces
would be living in such poverty.
It is absolutely right to make this commitment. I
think the British public would approve of us pledging
this support because of the sacrifices the
Commonwealth Veterans have made and because of the
debt of gratitude we owe to them.
Today’s announcement follows a commitment in June by
DFID to design a programme to support pre-independence
war veterans.
RCEL Deputy Grand President and former Chief of Defence
Staff, GCB CBE DSO, said:
We owe a great debt to the service men and women of
the Commonwealth who served in the British Armed
Forces in the Second World War and afterwards prior
to their countries’ independence.
This grant will help the RCEL ensure that these brave
men and women are sustained and cared for in their
twilight years. As important, it will let them know
that they have not been forgotten and their service
and sacrifice is remembered.
Without this support, the 4,500 veterans and 2,500
widows would be unable to secure the equivalent of
one-meal-a-day. UK aid will mean that those who served
in the British Armed Forces across the Commonwealth
pre-independence will not live their later years in
poverty.
Notes to editors
- The package, worth £11.8 million, will be awarded
to the Royal Commonwealth Ex-Services League
through UK Aid Direct. UK
Aid Direct supports small- and medium-sized Civil
Society Organisations and charities, based in the UK
and overseas, to achieve sustained poverty reduction
and to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals.
- The Royal Commonwealth Ex-Services League (RCEL)
was established in 1921 as a charity to provide support
to those who served The British Crown during The Great
War. Over the last century RCEL has continued to
support veterans who served in the British Armed Forces
and their widows from Commonwealth Nations prior to
their country’s independence. All those supported are
resident in their country of origin and living in
poverty.
- The welfare of Commonwealth veterans was previously
provided for through grants from LIBOR grants, a means
through which the UK government re-directs fines levied
for financial manipulation of the LIBOR rate to
worthwhile causes. LIBOR is the London Inter-bank
Offered Rate or the average of interest rates estimated
by each of the leading banks in London to borrow from
other banks.
- UK aid will mean the support for veterans is
increased from the previous support they received
through LIBOR grants and UK service charities, to
ensure they receive the equivalent of two-meals-a-day
or 2,400 calories (the amount healthy adults should aim
to eat everyday) through cash transfers.
- During the Second World War, an estimated 4.5
million Commonwealth soldiers from the Indian
sub-continent, Africa and the Caribbean fought in the
British Army for the Allied Forces. Many more
Commonwealth soldiers fought in further conflicts.
- Today, around 14,000 thousand veterans are living
across the Commonwealth, with 7,000 veterans and their
widows in need of support to meet their basic needs.
- The programme will run in more than 30 countries
eligible for Overseas Development Assistance (ODA):
Antigua, Bangladesh, Belize, Botswana, Cameroon,
Dominica, Fiji, Gambia, Ghana, Grenada, Guyana, India,
Jamaica, Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi, Malaysia, Mauritius,
Montserrat, Pakistan, St. Lucia, St. Vincent, Sierra
Leone, South Africa, Sri Lanka, Swaziland, Tanzania,
Uganda, Zambia and Zimbabwe.
- The requisite years post-independence Commonwealth
veterans are required to have served in the British
Armed Forces to remain in the UK varies from unit to
unit. The average time served to remain is
approximately four years.
|