The United Nations (UN) has eased Kenya’s cash crunch with a
Sh1.9 billion refund for money spent by its troops fighting Al-Shabaab
militants in Somalia.
The Treasury documents show that
the reimbursement was done last month, and accounts for a third of this
year’s total refunds of Sh6.1 billion.
The refund is
scheduled quarterly and the Treasury had received Sh906 million in the
five months to November—pushing total refunds for the first half to
Sh2.7 billion.
In the past, the delay of the money had been linked to the UN’s insistence on proper verification of Kenya’s claims.
The refund is expected to ease budgetary constraints for a
government whose revenue collection for first five months to November is
behind targets by Sh52.6 billion, setting the stage for further budget
cuts.
Nearly 4,000 Kenyan soldiers are part of African
Union Mission to Somalia (Amisom) and the international community
provides $1,028 (Sh103,828) for each Amisom soldier a month.
Their
respective governments then deduct about $200 (Sh20,200) for
administrative costs meaning the soldiers take home about $800
(Sh83,628). The soldiers receive the allowances through the government.
The
funds are only released to Amisom by the UN once accounts from the
previous payment are signed off. In October 2011, Kenya formally sent
4,660 soldiers to Somalia after incessant attacks and kidnapping of
civilians by Al-Shabaab militants within its territory.
A
year later, the UN Security Council gave Kenya the greenlight to join
the Amisom, a decision that meant the Treasury would not bear the full
costs of the incursion.
Amisom has soldiers drawn from Uganda, Burundi, Djibouti, Sierra Leone and Kenya.
Amisom has soldiers drawn from Uganda, Burundi, Djibouti, Sierra Leone and Kenya.
Kenya
has in the past used its ambassador to the UN, Macharia Kamau, to
demand the reimbursements, saying that failure to refund was
“unacceptable”.
President Uhuru Kenyatta nominated Mr Kamau as Foreign Affairs PS on Friday.
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