22 May 2015

Bid to re-route Vanuatu aid condemned

9:06 am on 22 May 2015

New Zealand disaster relief agencies have condemned suggestions by Vanuatu's government that all cyclone aid funding should go through its own coffers.

Volunteers in Vanuatu store donated goods after Cyclone Pam.

Volunteers in Vanuatu work to store donated goods after Cyclone Pam. Photo: RNZ

The cost of reconstruction after the devastation caused by Cyclone Pam has been put at $600 milllion.

New Zealand Disaster Relief Forum chair Ian McInnes said the government should focus on removing red tape and finding ways to work more effectively with disaster relief organisations.

"Quite frankly, I think it's a kneejerk reaction to feeling that they're under fiscal pressure.

"They don't have a whole lot of financing, and I do sympathise with that, for moving stocks around. They're quickly running out of money for fuel and transportation."

But he said it would be a mistake to address this by re-routing aid funds.

"Routing all aid through governments is a very bad idea for all the obvious reasons. Not least it can be hard to trace. But that would be a very inefficient way to run a rapid and large-scale humanitarian response."

Listen to more on the power play over aid on Insight, just after 8am on Sunday.

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