Medicine Hat News

Defence minister says private sector investment necessary to help Mali rebuild

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OTTAWA Businesses can help war-torn countries such as Mali recover from conflicts by investing in projects there, Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan said Tuesday.

Sajjan, who announced Canada’s new UN peacekeepi­ng mission in the west African country earlier this week, said broader economic developmen­t is also needed, because the military can’t do it on its own.

His assessment comes as Canada’s newly establishe­d developmen­t finance institutio­n has announced its first private sector partnershi­p. The US$10million investment by FinDev Canada will bring electricit­y to millions of poor people in Kenya, in a more stable east Africa.

“We have to look at: How do you bring business into this, because they have the ability to look at things a lot differentl­y?” Sajjan told The Canadian Press on Tuesday after testifying before the House of Commons defence committee.

“It’s not just looking for the military to solve the conflict.”

Sajjan said it is up to private companies to decide whether Mali is safe enough for investment.

“But I think the more security you have in a nation, the better investment is. There are already currently investment­s going into the nation and hopefully it will grow.”

Earlier this week, Sajjan joined Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland in announcing that Canada will contribute to the UN mission in Mali, which is struggling in the aftermath of a jihadist insurgency.

Canada’s 12-month commitment will include about 250 personnel, two Chinook transport helicopter­s and four smaller, armed Griffon helicopter­s to act as escorts.

FinDev Canada announced its partnershi­p with the Kenyan solar energy company, M-Kopa to bring electricit­y to millions of remote villagers who live off the grid on less than $2 a day.

Paul Lamontagne, FinDev’s managing director, said the project will expand into neighbouri­ng Tanzania and Uganda.

The plan will allow families to light their homes for three or four additional hours each day. That means girls can study at night so they stay in school and it will reduce needless deaths from cooking with kerosene in enclosed areas, he said.

That jibes with Canada’s overall developmen­t priorities, which include promoting clean energy as well as an overarchin­g feminist foreign policy, he said.

“It really makes a dent in lower carbon emissions,” said Lamontagne.

“It hits the box in gender. The company employs lots of women. It touches the lives of lots of women and girls.”

The M-Kopa project is worthwhile and will have a positive impact, said Liam Swiss, a developmen­t expert at Memorial University in St. John’s, N.L.

But the fact that FinDev chose to invest in an establishe­d company in a relatively stable region of Africa doesn’t bode well for the type of higher-risk investment­s that Sajjan is calling for in Mali and elsewhere, said Swiss.

“I suspect it’s going to be more playing it safe and trying to invest in opportunit­ies that are viewed as being less risky, less likely to be affected by conflict,” said Swiss.

Sajjan said that on a recent trip to west Africa he saw business opportunit­ies in Mali’s agricultur­e sector.

He also told the committee that he wants to develop more defence partnershi­ps with private companies to help the Canadian Forces solve the security problems of the future.

 ??  ?? Harjit Sajjan
Harjit Sajjan

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