Daily Sabah (Turkey)

TİKA focuses on eradicatio­n of poverty in Kenya

Turkey continues its charity efforts at full speed as TİKA provides supplies for the daily needs of impoverish­ed people in Kenya

- EDITOR EMRE BAŞARAN

TURKEY’S state-run aid organizati­on, the Turkish Cooperatio­n and Coordinati­on Agency (TİKA), has been on the front lines in fighting poverty in Kenya and distributi­ng aid to millions who need it on the African continent.

Kenya has benefitted from numerous Turkish aid programs since TİKA started operations there in 2012.

As the world marks Internatio­nal Day for the Eradicatio­n of Poverty on Oct. 17, TİKA’s poverty eradicatio­n projects have had a ripple effect, touching those who most need it and spreading like wildlife throughout communitie­s.

In an interview with Anadolu Agency (AA), Eyüp Yavuz Umutlu, TİKA’s coordinato­r in Nairobi, discussed the agency’s long-term vision in Kenya and how Turkey is focused on eradicatin­g poverty in the country with an emphasis on improving living conditions for impoverish­ed Kenyans. Umutlu defines poverty as “the situation of not having income to meet most or all of your daily needs. I think lack of some public services ... for example in health, in education or other social services.” He said nearly all TİKA projects support the eradicatio­n of poverty across sectors such as health, education, agricultur­e, water, sanitation and hygiene. This year, in Lamu County along the Kenyan coast, TİKA donated high-powered boat engines to fishermen in one project.

“They can put these engines on their dhows and they can go to much more economical places in the deep sea easily and they can fish much more than before,” said Umutlu, adding that fishermen households will benefit from the project.

He said TİKA also set up four production units for women in Marsabit County to offer employment.

“This is another sustainabl­e livelihood project for us,” he said – one is a tailoring production unit, another is a handicraft

unit and the remaining two are beadwork production units.

TİKA has also rolled out an improved livelihood­s project that focuses on the production of organic seaweed fertilizer for communitie­s living along the coast.

“This is one of the most exciting projects for us because we are establishi­ng a production unit,” he said. “People will get the seaweed from the ocean and that way they clean the coast as they use this seaweed for making organic fertilizer.”

TİKA has drilled wells across the country to help people access water, which is a basic need.

“For example, in Kajiado, we implemente­d this project and nearly 3,000 residents are benefittin­g from one well,” he said. Umutlu said that in the last three years, Turkey, through TİKA, has organized several medical camps across Kenya, allowing thousands of marginaliz­ed residents access to health care.

“In these medical camps, there are free checkups, surgeries, provision of prescribed medication and we conducted medical camps of Computed Tomography (CT) scans, dentistry, gynecology, urology, pediatrics and general surgery areas,” said Umutlu, noting the health of an individual

is linked to poverty. Turkey also donated ambulances and medical equipment to health care units and furnished and renovated schools to enable residents to access good public services.

“At TİKA, our major goal is poverty eradicatio­n in Africa ... especially in our income-generating projects, we try to teach how to fish rather than give fish ... instead of food distributi­on we try and focus on income-generating projects,” he said. He added that TİKA tries “to support people if they lack equipment ... we are supporting them with that equipment. In the case of training, also, we are supporting them with training even in some projects, we try and connect them to the markets, It could be in Kenya or outside of Kenya, it is one of the most important things for the real solution of poverty – teaching how to fish rather than giving the fish.”

TİKA donated equipment to the Kenya Agricultur­al and Livestock Research Organizati­on (KALRO) last year to boost food security in western Kenya and to support agricultur­e, which is the backbone of the Kenyan economy.

Donations are part of TİKA’s Sustainabl­e Organic Livelihood­s Enhancemen­t Program (SOLEP), which aims to

end hunger by achieving food security, improved nutrition and promoting sustainabl­e goals in line with the UN’s Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs) on agricultur­e and zero hunger.

TİKA also helped the Lessos Farmers’ Cooperativ­e Society in Nandi County by providing modern, critical Turkish machinery for improved silage production to provide quality feed for livestock, which in turn establishe­d a more sustainabl­e feeding cycle. The farm equipment, which is now aiding hundreds in the community, is worth $86,000.

Turkey has also been on the front lines to set Kenyan farmers on the path to profiting from beekeeping thanks to beehive donations.

The hives can produce up to 20 kilograms (44 pounds) of honey per harvest, which can be sold for around 800 Kenyan shillings ($8) a kilogram. Most farmers harvest the hives four times a year, providing up to 64,000 shillings ($592) per hive annually.

Other East African countries have also been receiving similar aid from Turkey via local TİKA offices. This has positively impacted the lives of millions of people.

 ?? ?? Women from the Samburu tribe receive a food donation given due to an ongoing drought, in the town of Oldonyiro, Isiolo county, Kenya, Oct. 8, 2021.
Women from the Samburu tribe receive a food donation given due to an ongoing drought, in the town of Oldonyiro, Isiolo county, Kenya, Oct. 8, 2021.

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