EU gives Somalia US$200m aid
THE European Union has given Somalia 158 million euros (US$200 million) to improve education, the legal system and security, its new envoy said yesterday, as the Horn of Africa nation tries to recover from more than two decades of conflict.
The new aid program follows the election in September of a new Somali president, the culmination of a regionally brokered, UN-backed effort to restore central government control and end fighting that has killed tens of thousands.
President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, elected in the first vote of its kind since Somalia slid into civil war in 1991, is grappling with corruption, an Islamist insurgency and piracy along the country's strategic Indian Ocean shipping route.
"After 21 years, the government is rebuilding the systems of a functional state at local, regional and central levels," said Michele Cervone d'Urso, the EU's special envoy to Somalia.
"The EU is more committed to work directly and in partnership with Somalis. We will ask the implementing agencies to work more closely with the government and civil society."
A suicide bombing in the capital Mogadishu yesterday highlighted the challenges faced by the new Somali leader.
The development aid package, the largest EU program ever approved for Somalia, will go toward strengthening the judiciary, broken state institutions, the Somali police force and the country's blighted education system.
Some funds will be used to bring home Somali professionals abroad to help improve education standards.
In the past, Western and regional states have pumped in millions of dollars of humanitarian aid. Somalia's residents have complained that most aid organizations operated from neighboring Kenya with little involvement on the ground.
President Mohamud called for more aid, and for assistance to be channelled directly through the new government.
"We requested them to have direct a relationship with Somalia," he said.
The new aid program follows the election in September of a new Somali president, the culmination of a regionally brokered, UN-backed effort to restore central government control and end fighting that has killed tens of thousands.
President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, elected in the first vote of its kind since Somalia slid into civil war in 1991, is grappling with corruption, an Islamist insurgency and piracy along the country's strategic Indian Ocean shipping route.
"After 21 years, the government is rebuilding the systems of a functional state at local, regional and central levels," said Michele Cervone d'Urso, the EU's special envoy to Somalia.
"The EU is more committed to work directly and in partnership with Somalis. We will ask the implementing agencies to work more closely with the government and civil society."
A suicide bombing in the capital Mogadishu yesterday highlighted the challenges faced by the new Somali leader.
The development aid package, the largest EU program ever approved for Somalia, will go toward strengthening the judiciary, broken state institutions, the Somali police force and the country's blighted education system.
Some funds will be used to bring home Somali professionals abroad to help improve education standards.
In the past, Western and regional states have pumped in millions of dollars of humanitarian aid. Somalia's residents have complained that most aid organizations operated from neighboring Kenya with little involvement on the ground.
President Mohamud called for more aid, and for assistance to be channelled directly through the new government.
"We requested them to have direct a relationship with Somalia," he said.
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