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NewWorld Bank sets new social and environmental rules on financial assistance

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Under new World Bank rules indigenous peoples would need to give 'free prior and informed consent' before projects that affect them can proceed. Photo: Reuters
Agence France-Presse

The World Bank has unveiled a set of new social and environmental rules for its 188 member nations to receive financial assistance.

According to the World Bank, the draft framework, under discussion for several years, represents "a major step forward" for the development lender that strengthens its protection of the environment and the world's poor and vulnerable in its investment projects.

In early March, the World Bank acknowledged that internal reviews had found significant flaws in the way it handles the resettlement of people to make way for development projects.

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Under the proposed framework, the World Bank will demand that borrowing countries extend labour rights, including for the first time the rights to collective bargaining and freedom of association.

The institution also amended a previous proposal on environmental standards that had raised ire among nongovernmental organisations and other groups in July 2014.

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Now, the bank will deem that "offsets" - actions to compensate for "unavoidable biodiversity impacts" linked to economic development - should be considered "a last resort" and prohibited in certain instances.

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