Residents of Ahero move to safer grounds after their houses were flooded
following heavy El Nino rains on November 18, 2015. The EU set aside
the kitty to prevent loss of life and destruction of property in the
Horn of Africa region. PHOTO | FILE
By IMMACULATE KARAMBU, ikarambu@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- The money will be shared out between Kenya, Djibouti, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Uganda, Somali and Uganda.
- The EU set aside the kitty to prevent loss of life and destruction of property in the Horn of Africa region.
Kenya is set to benefit from a Sh8.5 billion kitty
set aside by the European Union to prevent loss of life and destruction
of property in the Horn of Africa region as a result of the ongoing El
Niño rains.
The money will be shared out between Kenya, Djibouti,
Ethiopia, Eritrea, Uganda, Somali and Uganda, which according to the EU
have a combined 14.4 million people affected by the heavy rains so far.
The EU has announced aid of up to Sh13.5 billion to
finance emergency actions in countries affected by the El Niño rains in
Africa, the Caribbean, Central and South America.
“We need to react now so El Niño does not undermine
the efforts in poverty alleviation in many countries in the world that
have fought so hard to achieve. Today the EU is boosting its efforts to
prevent a crisis that could cause instability in the longer term,” said
European Commissioner for International Cooperation and Development
Neven Mimica.
EU expects the current El Niño to be the strongest
on record surpassing a similar one that was experienced between 1997 and
1998.
Of the total amount EU has allocated for the
humanitarian aid, Sh12.9 billion will come from the European Development
Fund Reserves and Sh648 million from the humanitarian budget.
The funds will be utilised to save lives and
increase resilience in the affected countries to mitigate further damage
and address immediate needs of water, shelter, health and nutrition.
The financing comes at a time when the World Bank
has announced a Sh1.6 trillion budget to help African countries build
resilience to climate change shocks.
In September, the government said that it had set
aside Sh5 billion and put on standby 70,000 National Youth Service
members in readiness for the El Niño rains.
A similar move by counties to set aside as much as
Sh50 million for a similar cause has however been criticised with those
opposed to the allocations saying that it may lead to embezzlement of
funds by county authorities.
Mid last month, the cabinet secretary for the
National Treasury Henry Rotich scaled down the country’s growth
prospects for this year due to the El Niño rains which he said slowed
down business activity across various sectors.
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