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Should the West intervene with more aid and peacekeeping forces to stem the stream of young men leaving their homelands?

(72 Posts)
GrannyGravy13 Thu 30-Oct-25 12:37:54

I have been pondering this for sometime now.

UK and many other countries are constantly derided on GN for their colonialism of the past, but should we (UK, Europe and America) now intervene in the poorer countries on the planet.

By intervention I mean help not exploitation.

Would/could any intervention and aid make their lives better in their homelands and slow down the migration of their menfolk.

This must leave a void, with women picking up the slack in dreadful conditions, many having sold what they can to fund their sons/brothers/husbands journey.

Maremia Thu 30-Oct-25 15:32:49

Read your 'link' growstuff, thanks.
Worth a look Posters, if you do links.

Maremia Thu 30-Oct-25 15:34:43

Meanwhile China has for decades been 'investing' in African countries. Not giving aid, but funding practical projects.
The downside is that these countries now owe a massive dept to China.

growstuff Thu 30-Oct-25 15:34:51

MOnica The problem with withdrawing all aid is that other countries, specifically China, won't stop. The wheels of history trundle along and one day we'll find that China has replaced the US as the dominant force in the world. It will already have its foot in sub-Saharan Africa with its vast resources. The Arab "bloc" might get its act together and form a coherent force.

None of us will be around, but I suspect the West has had its turn at the top table. Let's not forget that the Middle East and China (amongst others) were better educated and more civilised at a time when Europeans were still marauding tribes. Overseas aid does more than "aid" poorer countries - it buys soft diplomatic links.

Maremia Thu 30-Oct-25 15:35:53

Think the 'Sudan' Thread has dropped, so it's relevant to talk about that tragic country here as well.

growstuff Thu 30-Oct-25 15:36:27

Maremia

Meanwhile China has for decades been 'investing' in African countries. Not giving aid, but funding practical projects.
The downside is that these countries now owe a massive dept to China.

Yes, they do and I doubt if China will let them forget. China has replaced the British and other Empires.

M0nica Thu 30-Oct-25 15:42:45

Maremia

Oh GrannyGravy, this is such a sad thread. Good on you, having a go.
It's sad because either Posters, like myself, have only wishes, and not much else, but will persist, and might learn,
and because other Posters could be completely against the whole concept of helping 'others', and will say so.

I am not against helping other. I have been a generous and continuing donator to overseas aid charities for over half a century.

But looking back over those years we have seen so little change, so little development and so much of our aid being syphoned off for non-aid use.

I just think it is time we sat back and assessed whether our aid is a help or a hindrance. The problem is that the donors have so much of themselves invested in aid programmes, that it is very difficult to face the fact that we may be doing more harm than good, and that the main benefits of this money have been us and our sensitive consciences, rather than the people we are meant to be helping.

I for one, while still donating, am aware that by doing so I am making the problems for these countries worse rather than better

Wyllow3 Thu 30-Oct-25 15:46:32

GrannyGravy13

I have been pondering this for sometime now.

UK and many other countries are constantly derided on GN for their colonialism of the past, but should we (UK, Europe and America) now intervene in the poorer countries on the planet.

By intervention I mean help not exploitation.

Would/could any intervention and aid make their lives better in their homelands and slow down the migration of their menfolk.

This must leave a void, with women picking up the slack in dreadful conditions, many having sold what they can to fund their sons/brothers/husbands journey.

I think this is a great start.

Hats off to you, GG13.

Wyllow3 Thu 30-Oct-25 15:50:38

Not dealing with war Zones, but abject poverty, those "small but widespread schemes" to bring decent water, a modicum of health support, education on how to run small businesses, the latest on crops ie maximum production from bad soil ...Sewing machines for local co-operatives, birth control, Aids funding et al

...these can slowly make a huge difference.

M0nica Thu 30-Oct-25 15:50:52

growstuff

Maremia

Meanwhile China has for decades been 'investing' in African countries. Not giving aid, but funding practical projects.
The downside is that these countries now owe a massive dept to China.

Yes, they do and I doubt if China will let them forget. China has replaced the British and other Empires.

It is our aid giving policies that have led to this situation. We have poured aid into these countries without any kind of come back and made them dependent on other people's money for everything they do (plus funding those ruling these countries)

Now that we aare no longer pouring money into these countries, they are incapable of functioning on their own and funding their own projects and are just glad to be able to find another source of funds. The permanent 'helpless and hopeless' mentality engendered in them by the aid giving culture has made them reckless about the long term consequences of Chinese loans. I think they just expect that when the pips start squeaking they will just turn round and look for people elsewhere to pay their loans and sort them out again.

Galaxy Thu 30-Oct-25 15:59:00

I frequently think non intervention is as harmful as intervention, but politically non intervention is easier as you don't get people screaming 'but Iraq' at you twenty years down the line.

Maremia Thu 30-Oct-25 16:00:16

You are making some thought provoking points MOnica.
Perhaps the ones at the top, processing all of our aid, have been at fault, and we feel we have 'done our bit'.
But I do think it's more than just permanent 'hopelessness'.

Some of the 'low level' aid programmes seem to work.
Thinking about Mary's Meals, which feeds children but only at their school, and so promotes education as well. They employ local women as cooks, and buy and local basic produce for the meals.
Small stuff, not at governments levels.

Maremia Thu 30-Oct-25 16:01:40

Think I have just copied Wyllow's recent post.

GrannyGravy13 Thu 30-Oct-25 16:01:53

I will admit that in the past I have been all for cutting the overseas aid budget.

I have begun to realise that the world is shrinking and when a butterfly flaps its wings in a faraway sub Saharan country, Europe feels the breeze.

Aid is soft diplomacy as is the Royal Family (apologies republicans) and the country who’s government is most effective at using soft diplomacy will end up in a position of power.

growstuff Thu 30-Oct-25 16:16:29

I have begun to realise that the world is shrinking and when a butterfly flaps its wings in a faraway sub Saharan country, Europe feels the breeze.

What a lovely way of putting it!

MaizieD Thu 30-Oct-25 16:19:09

This, from the link I posted earlier:

For decades, developing nations have been caught in a set of global systems, economic, political, financial, that extract wealth, suppress growth, and keep entire populations trapped. And while aid campaigns and policy summits talk about “ending poverty,” the core machinery that produces it rarely changes.

And some of the 'core machinery' is, according to the article:

Start

The Debt Trap: When Loans Become Chains

Many poor countries owe billions to institutions like the IMF and World Bank. These loans come with strings attached: governments must cut public services, privatize industries, and open their markets.

This process is called “structural adjustment.”
But in practice, it means:

• Hospitals closed.
• Teachers laid off.
• Water systems sold to private corporations.
Meanwhile, the money keeps flowing out: in 2023 alone, Global South countries paid $232 billion in debt service, far more than they received in aid.

Unfair Trade: The Myth of “Free” Markets

Developing countries are told to embrace “free trade.” But rich countries don’t play fair. They subsidize their farmers and industries while demanding that poorer countries drop tariffs and protections.

Take West African cotton farmers: they grow high-quality cotton, but can’t compete with U.S. cotton dumped on the market, subsidized by billions in government support.

Result: Local economies collapse. Foreign goods flood markets. Dependency deepens.

Global Corruption, Not Just Local

The media loves to portray developing countries as corrupt. But rarely do they follow the money.

Stolen public funds are hidden in offshore tax havens. And who helps? Western lawyers. Swiss banks. British real estate firms.

This isn’t local failure. It’s a global system of legal loopholes protecting thieves.

Colonial Institutions That Never Left

Even after independence, many former colonies were left with institutions designed for extraction, not development.

Laws that protected settlers still govern land. Bureaucracies serve elites, not citizens. Borders drawn in Europe divide ethnic groups and fuel conflict.

Brain Drain: Exporting the Future

When the smartest people in a country leave to work in London, New York, or Berlin, what’s left?

Doctors. Engineers. Entrepreneurs.

They were trained at public expense, but serve elsewhere. Not by choice, but because home offers few opportunities.

End

That isn't everything, but it's enough to start with..,

Ilovecheese Thu 30-Oct-25 16:23:30

Climate change will be a factor in making countries poorer, as crops fail.

fancythat Thu 30-Oct-25 16:30:35

Even Bill Gates has given up on the, climate change will cause massive destruction" or whatever he said, idea.

Allira Thu 30-Oct-25 16:31:33

GrannyGravy13

Sorry for not being precise, the OP was just a jumble of my thoughts to what is a growing issue for many people and countries.

Sudan is an even bigger problem than Gaza/Israel.

African countries are ripe for China to pop in and exert influence and pressure more so than it already has/is.

The solution if there is one is way above my paygrade

Although my post was general in response to your question, GrannyGravy I mentioned Sudan specifically in the last sentence because that country is rich in gold which could be used to build a prosperous country and help all its people.

Instead the gold is being used to fund weapons by both sides in the Civil war and I can't see how intervening with peacekeepers could help without even more lives being lost and the West being accused of interfering.

Charities such as the Red Cross are doing their best supporting people with aid too, and we as individuals can help there and in other countries with our donations but is this aid always getting to those who need it?

growstuff Thu 30-Oct-25 16:34:39

fancythat

Even Bill Gates has given up on the, climate change will cause massive destruction" or whatever he said, idea.

From what I've read, he hasn't actually given up on the idea, but he does think there should be more emphasis on eradicating disease and poverty. He thinks there are ways global warming could be mitigated, but that the targets are unreaslistic.

Global warming will affect some countries, so the world needs to prepare for that.

MaizieD Thu 30-Oct-25 16:34:54

fancythat

Even Bill Gates has given up on the, climate change will cause massive destruction" or whatever he said, idea.

I'm sure the people in the Caribbean who have just experienced hurricane Melissa (which weather scientists attribute to warming ocean water as a result of climate change) will be relieved to know that it didn't cause 'massive destruction'. hmm

growstuff Thu 30-Oct-25 16:39:01

Allira

GrannyGravy13

Sorry for not being precise, the OP was just a jumble of my thoughts to what is a growing issue for many people and countries.

Sudan is an even bigger problem than Gaza/Israel.

African countries are ripe for China to pop in and exert influence and pressure more so than it already has/is.

The solution if there is one is way above my paygrade

Although my post was general in response to your question, GrannyGravy I mentioned Sudan specifically in the last sentence because that country is rich in gold which could be used to build a prosperous country and help all its people.

Instead the gold is being used to fund weapons by both sides in the Civil war and I can't see how intervening with peacekeepers could help without even more lives being lost and the West being accused of interfering.

Charities such as the Red Cross are doing their best supporting people with aid too, and we as individuals can help there and in other countries with our donations but is this aid always getting to those who need it?

What Western aid can do is support the refugee camps in Egypt and Chad (and other countries with huge numbers of refugees, such as Turkey). There's a real risk that groups of people in the camps will become radicalised, so the West could benefit from trying to stop that from happening.

MaizieD Thu 30-Oct-25 16:48:32

fancythat

Personally, you must be joking.

Bankrupt the "West" before end of next year.

It's 'the West' that is bankrupting those countries.

'The West' won't go bankrupt

Allira Thu 30-Oct-25 16:49:24

Good points M0nica.

Does aid promote a culture of dependency and is it counter-productive in the long-term?
But how difficult it is to see people struggling to find even the basics to survive.

Allira Thu 30-Oct-25 16:51:59

fancythat

Even Bill Gates has given up on the, climate change will cause massive destruction" or whatever he said, idea.

That's not exactly what he said.

Cossy Thu 30-Oct-25 16:52:59

Babs03

Is so complex, some countries do need help financially having been destroyed by war and resources plundered by western governments or other interested players, others like Iran have been crippled by sanctions and have a ruthless regime so is not straightforward.
I think the best thing to do would be to give free scholarships to some young men or women over here to study civil engineering, medicine, and other useful professions, on the proviso they return with their new skills and hopefully help rebuild their homeland.
Sadly there has been such a brain drain from third world countries which makes it even harder for countries to recover.
And of course more aid should be available so this army of infrastructure engineers, surgeons/docs, and other professionals can hit the ground running.
Is a dream but if there were less self interested governments and more philanthropy I believe it could work and would benefit all of us.

I absolutely agree. Greed and a lust for power seem to get in the way