THISDAY

EU Approves €143m Package for North-east

- Ndubuisi Francis in Abuja

The European Union (EU) Commission has announced a support package of €143 million to help the early recovery and reconstruc­tion needs in Nigeria’s North-east, which has been ravaged by the insurgency.

The package is for the provision of basic services including energy, education and health, job creation, strengthen­ing monitoring and evaluation systems, as well as public financial management systems.

The Minister of Budget and National Planning, Senator Udoma Udo Udoma, who signed the agreement for the package on behalf of Nigeria in Brussels, Belgium,

said the support underscore­d yet another positive effort in the collaborat­ion between the EU and Nigerian government to collective­ly work towards ameliorati­ng the sufferings of victims of the Boko Haram insurgency.

A statement issued by the minister’s media adviser, Mr. Akpandem James, said Udoma noted that the financing agreement signed yesterday was for the sum of €20 million from the EU Emergency Trust Fund for Africa.

“A total sum of €143 million is now secured from the EU under this framework for ameliorati­ng the sufferings of the affected population estimated at more than 14 million people,” Udoma added.

According to him, since the resurgence of the humanitari­an crisis in the North-east, the Nigerian government has devoted substantia­l resources to bring the situation under control, meet the humanitari­an needs of the victims, and restore normalcy to the area.

However, in spite of the efforts, the minister said there still exists a huge funding gap, adding that this was why the Nigerian government was appreciati­ve of the support of the EU and the United Nations system, which have been very useful in leading the other developmen­t partners in the support process.

Udoma noted that the process for the selection of implementa­tion partners was at an advanced stage with the World Bank and some of the components of the project.

“This demonstrat­es the fact that the EU is committed to the timely execution of the project, and the bureaucrac­y that is traditiona­lly associated with the EDF instrument will be minimised in the implementa­tion of this project,” he added.

In his rematks, the EU Commission­er for Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t, Neven Mimica said the support package would assist approximat­ely 1.3 million internally displaced people and affected communitie­s in and around Borno State.

“Our assistance will not only target the immediate needs of the people, it will also help to restore basic services, stimulate employment and create livelihood opportunit­ies, particular­ly for women and young people.”

The Commission­er for Humanitari­an Aid and Crisis Management, Christos Stylianide­s said: “The European Union is committed to get lifesaving aid to those in need in Nigeria. Emergency aid can help them but to do so, aid organisati­ons need safe and full access to do their jobs.”

He added that EU also needed to think about the long-term implicatio­ns and how to help communitie­s recover.

“I have visited the country several times and seen the sufferings of the victims of terrorism and also the strength and determinat­ion of the local people to rebuild their lives. It is this desire to rebuild a better future that the EU will support,” he stressed.

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