Politics and policy
By KIARIE NJOROGE, gnjoroge@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- Kenya has been awaiting the cash from August last year.
- The UN failed to refund Sh2.03 billion in the quarter to September and another Sh2.01 billion in the three months to December.
- The refund looks set to ease budgetary constraints from a government reeling from a shortfall in taxes as the KRA failed to hit revenue targets by Sh23 billion in the first half of the year.
The United Nations has offered Kenya Sh3.7 billion as
refund for money spent by its troops fighting Al-Shabaab militants in
Somalia after months of delay
Treasury documents show that the reimbursement was done in
February. The country has been awaiting the cash from August last year.
The UN failed to refund Sh2.03 billion in the quarter to September and another Sh2.01 billion in the three months to December.
The refund looks set to ease budgetary constraints
from a government reeling from a shortfall in taxes as the Kenya Revenue
Authority failed to hit revenue targets by Sh23 billion in the first
half of the year.
In the past, delay in reimbursement of the money
has been linked to the UN’s insistence on proper verification of Kenya’s
claims.
In October 2011, the country formally sent 4,660
soldiers to Somalia after incessant attacks and kidnapping by Al-Shabaab
militants within its territory.
A year later, the UN Security Council gave Kenya
the green light to join African Union Mission to Somalia (Amisom), a
decision that meant the Treasury would not bear the full costs of the
incursion.
Amisom is an eight-year- old operation with nearly
20,000 troops from Uganda, Burundi, Djibouti, Sierra Leone and Kenya.
Amisom refunded Kenya the monies spent from the date of the UN
resolution until June 2012 when Amisom began catering for the soldiers
directly.
Under the deal, Kenyan soldiers were to receive a
monthly allowance of Sh88,408 ($1,028) each besides their salaries as
well as comprehensive medical covers and access to advanced equipment.
The entry into Somalia to battle Al-Shabaab has
triggered a series of grenade and bomb attacks in the Kenya as the
militant group pushes for withdraw from the country. This has spurred
the UK, US, Australia and France to warn their citizens against
travelling to Kenya.
Kenya has in the past used its ambassador to the
UN, Macharia Kamau, to demand the reimbursements, claiming that failure
to refund the money was not only “unacceptable”, but also
“unsustainable.”
The UN cut compensation for the Kenyan operation in Somalia by a fifth to Sh4.69 billion in the year to June.
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