By Mugambi Mutegi
In Summary
- Treasury factors expected reimbursement funds into Budget Review paper.
Kenya’s incursion into neighbouring Somalia has
consumed more than Sh25 billion whose reimbursement Nairobi is urgently
seeking to ease its budgetary constraints.
Kenya is looking up to the United Nations to
reimburse the money spent by its defence forces – now in Somalia as part
of the African Union Mission (Amisom) in the coming months, having
factored it in the Budget.
Amisom, comprising Burundi, Uganda, Djibouti,
Sierra Leone and Kenyan forces, is backed by the UN but Kenya, which was
the last to join the stabilisation force, has only received minimum
external financial support for its contribution.
The Treasury has included the Sh26.8 billion that
the Kenyan Defence Forces have so far spent in the 2013 budget review
and outlook paper, meaning it expects the reimbursement to be made in
the coming months.
Nairobi made a similar provision for the payment
of Sh18.9 billion in the last financial year but was paid only Sh5.4
billion, leaving a Sh13.1 billion deficit.
Delay in reimbursement of the money has been
linked to UN’s insistence on proper verification of Kenya’s claims that
are yet to be done, culminating in budgetary pressures with the
continued build-up of public expenditure obligations.
“Programme grants (Amisom reimbursements)
amounted to Sh5.8 billion against a revised target of 18.9 billion,
recording a shortfall of Sh13.1 billion,” the Treasury says in the
report dated September 2013.
The Sh26.8 billion demand means Kenya has spent an additional Sh13 billion since it made the reimbursement demand last year.
The government expects its revenues, including the
Amisom refund, to rise from this year’s Sh1.1 trillion to Sh1.268
trillion next year, representing an increase of 14.5 per cent.
Expenditure is also expected to grow from Sh1.28
trillion to Sh1.54 trillion next financial year, leaving a deficit of
Sh278 billion. The country’s public debt is also set to continue rising
in line with the Treasury’s borrowing plan.
The mismatch between revenue and expenditure has
become the biggest obstacle to the planned execution of capital
extensive projects such as the offer of free maternity care and
provision of laptops to Class One pupils in line with President
Kenyatta’s election promises.
Kenya launched an incursion into Somalia in
response to incessant attacks and kidnappings by Al-Shabaab militants
within its territory. Kenya formally sent 4,660 of its soldiers to
Somalia in October 2011.
A year later, the UN Security Council, gave Kenya
the green light to join Amisom, a decision that meant it would not bear
the full costs of the incursion.
“We entered Somalia with the full cost to
taxpayers but with Amisom, Kenyans will no longer be required to pay for
our stay in Somalia,” the Chief of Kenya Defence Forces General Julius
Karangi told a parliamentary committee last year.
No comments:
Post a Comment