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Instead of instituting an Africa Commission to investigate Africa's problems, the United Kingdom government could aim towards achieving the 35 year-old 0.7 per cent aid target by 2008, commit to cancelling the UK's share of the remaining poor country multilateral debt owed to the World Bank and International Monetary Fund and call for the IMF and World Bank to stop imposing unsuccessful, undemocratic and unfair economic policy conditions on African countries. According to the World Development Movement, these are just three of 15 steps the UK government could take instead of the Africa Commission, launched by Tony Blair in February to produce a report with recommendations on how to make the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) work in Africa. "In light of existing analysis on the problems facing Africa, the range of previous political declarations from African Governments themselves, the range of existing - and still unfulfilled - promises of industrialised countries, and the way the UK and EU have ignored African governments in the WTO, WDM is deeply sceptical over the need for, and usefulness of, the Commission for Africa," said the organisation.