Kenya has scored a major diplomatic coup by hosting a high-powered meeting that brings together some of the world’s top bosses.
The
leaders from the UN, the World Bank, the European Union and Islamic
Development Bank Group are expected in Nairobi on Wednesday to announce
the release of billions of shillings in grants for the Horn of Africa
region.
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, World Bank
President Jim Yong Kim, Islamic Development Bank Group President Ahmed
Mohamed Ali, African Union Commission deputy chairman Erastus Mwencha
and the European Commission’s deputy Director for Development and
Cooperation, Mr Marcus Cornaro, will be in the delegation that will meet
President Kenyatta at State House on Wednesday.
They
will be accompanied by EU special representative for the Horn of Africa,
Mr Alexander Rondos, Africa Development Bank Group President Donald
Kaberuka, and Igad executive secretary Mahboub Maalim.
The
groups have pooled a Sh716 billion ($8 billion) fund, which Kenya will
share with Uganda, Ethiopia, South Sudan, Sudan, Eritrea, Djibouti and
Somalia to restore peace and trigger economic growth in the Horn of
Africa.
Almost one-and-a-half years since the
international community appeared to shun Kenya after the March 4 General
Election, Foreign Affairs Cabinet Secretary Amina Mohamed now says the
mission was testimony that the country has regained her position in the
world community.
“It proves that the international
community now views Kenya in a positive way and is ready to work with
Kenya as the anchor of the Horn of Africa,” she said in a telephone
interview.
Last year, western envoys had warned against
electing the Jubilee coalition’s Uhuru Kenyatta and William Ruto, who
were facing charges at the International Criminal Court.
WORKED HARD
The
top US diplomat in Africa warned Kenyans that “choices have
consequences”, while the British High Commissioner cautioned that
relations would be limited to “essential contacts” if the pair was
elected.
The CS said the Jubilee government headed by
President Kenyatta and his deputy, Mr William Ruto has worked hard on
its image and the efforts have started to bear fruit.
“It
shows the confidence that they have in the Jubilee administration and
their readiness to work with the government.” The leaders will arrive on
Wednesday morning from Ethiopia where they started their tour on
Monday.
They will hold meetings with President
Kenyatta on Wednesday after which they will meet key business and civil
society representatives on Thursday.
The President is
expected to demonstrate to the leaders the responsibility Kenya has
shouldered in restoring regional peace and the price it has paid,
including exposure to terrorism, a statement from State House said.
“The over-arching theme of these visits is that there can be no peace without development and no development without peace.”
The
visit could indicate that the Western world is keen to shore up peace
and security in the volatile Horn of Africa region, where Somalia has
become a major base for global terrorism.
Said Mr Ban:
“The countries of the Horn of Africa are making important yet
unheralded progress in economic growth and political stability. Now is a
crucial moment to support those efforts, end the cycles of conflict and
poverty, and move from fragility to sustainability.”
Announcing
a Sh161 billion ($1.8 billion) pledge to finance cross-border projects
in the seven countries to boost economic growth, reduce poverty and
trigger business activity, Mr Jim said the fund was an opportunity for
the region to come out of poverty and grow economically.
“There
is greater opportunity now for the Horn of Africa to break free from
its cycles of drought, food insecurity, water insecurity and conflict by
building up regional security, generating a peace dividend, especially
among young women and men and spurring more cross-border cooperation.”
The
World Bank has published a paper which forecasts that Kenya, Uganda and
Somalia and Ethiopia will undergo a dramatic economic change when oil
production starts in the next few years.
“To Uganda’s
more than two billion barrels of reserves have been added oil finds in
Ethiopia’s south Omo region and in Kenya’s Turkana — discoveries that
rival some of the most productive oil fields on the continent.
BEYOND FIVE PERCENT
“The
secessionist state of Somaliland has signed production-sharing
agreements with foreign firms on areas yet to be drilled, and
exploration firms report substantial prospects along Somalia’s coastline
that need to be tested by drilling,” it says.
Last
month, Kenya passed the World Bank’s lower-middle-income threshold when
it rebased its Gross Domestic Product (GDP) become a middle level income
country with its economic project to grow beyond five per cent this
financial year.
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