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Thursday, November 21, 2024
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Thursday, November 21, 2024 | Latest Paper

Bruno Charbonneau and Jonathan Sears

Canada must rethink its strategy for aid to Mali

Two women grind rice outside a water pump station in the area of Koroyomme, Timbuktu, Mali. Canada is one of the largest providers of aid to Mali, but its contributions are still only enough to pay for one five kg bag of rice per Malian each year, write Bruno Charbonneau and Jonathan Sears. Photograph by Marco Dormino, courtesy of the United Nations
Two women grind rice outside a water pump station in the area of Koroyomme, Timbuktu, Mali. Canada is one of the largest providers of aid to Mali, but its contributions are still only enough to pay for one five kg bag of rice per Malian each year, write Bruno Charbonneau and Jonathan Sears. Photograph by Marco Dormino, courtesy of the United Nations
Two women grind rice outside a water pump station in the area of Koroyomme, Timbuktu, Mali. Canada is one of the largest providers of aid to Mali, but its contributions are still only enough to pay for one five kg bag of rice per Malian each year, write Bruno Charbonneau and Jonathan Sears. Photograph by Marco Dormino, courtesy of the United Nations
Two women grind rice outside a water pump station in the area of Koroyomme, Timbuktu, Mali. Canada is one of the largest providers of aid to Mali, but its contributions are still only enough to pay for one five kg bag of rice per Malian each year, write Bruno Charbonneau and Jonathan Sears. Photograph by Marco Dormino, courtesy of the United Nations