Lord Lawson (pictured, right) told Channel 4 that it had been a mistake to unfreeze the earlier payment and he urged Justine Greening, the recently-appointed Secretary of State for International Development (DfID), not to hand over the money due in December.
DfID has said in the past that supending aid payments hits the poor hardest and does not damage the ruling elite. It has also repeatedly cited a Rwandan government statistic that British aid has helped lift one million people out of poverty in the country in the past five years alone.
But a joint statement released by Ms Greening and
William Hague, the foreign secretary, last week said the evidence of Rwanda's involvement in Congo was "credible and compelling" and said it would influence future decisions on aid. The government of Rwanda has repeatedly denied the UN allegations.
Lord Lawson also criticised
David Cameron's pledge at the UN in September to raise the proptortion of its national wealth which Britain gives away in foreign aid to 0.7 per cent by 2015. This will increase the annual aid budget to £10.9bn, from £7.9bn this year - in the face of defence cuts in Britain of £4.4bn. Today, the Institute for Fiscal Studies said the government may need to find another £11bn from tax rises or welfare cuts if the economy continues to flatline.
"The philosophy of DfID is just to shovel the money out of the door as quickly as they possibly can in order to reach this target as soon as they can," Lord Lawson said. He added that an all-party report from the Economic Affairs Committee of the House of Lords last year said the 0.7 per cent target should be abandoned.
"It is simply talking about a quantity of money, not the effect that it might have, which is crazy, particularly... at a time when all other public expenditure programmes are having to be scaled back. For this to be roaring ahead unchecked," he said, "is very foolish indeed."
Lord Lawson, who is credited with dramatically reducing Britain's budget deficit during the mid-1980s, said he believed that Mr Cameron had commited to the 0.7 per cent figure in order to improve the image of the Conservative party and is, in his view, "a great mistake."
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