President Uhuru Kenyatta on Friday
reaffirmed Kenya’s commitment to protecting the environment, stating
that the country was well on course to adopting a green economy.
The
President pegged the country’s development on its environmental agenda,
saying that it was important to strike a balance between economic
growth and environmental stability.
“Investments and
trade are our top priorities but they must be environmentally viable.
The Constitution entrenches environmental protection, giving every
Kenyan a right to a clean environment.”
UNDER UN PATRONAGE
Mr
Kenyatta was speaking during the official closing of the United Nations
Environmental Assembly, UNEA, the highest level such gathering under
the UN patronage.
Also present was UN Secretary General
Ban Ki-moon, who thanked Kenya for her 40-plus years’ commitment to the
workings of the UN.
“UNEA has provided a better
understanding of the link between environment and development and shows
common acceptance that a healthy environment is essential for growth,”
Mr Ban said.
“The air we breathe, the water we drink
and the soil on which our food grows is part of a delicate ecosystem
that is under increasing pressure from human population, making
consumption unsustainable.”
Among key resolutions
passed are that states will crack down on environmental crime which
costs Africa Sh18 trillion every year through poaching, trafficking of
endangered species and depletion of forest through illegal logging.
The states also agreed to strengthen the Sustainable Development Goals.
East
African states formed a Sh500 million partnership to fight illegal
timber trade in the region. It will be implemented under the guidance of
Interpol and four UN agencies and the Government of Norway.
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