World Bank announces $1b fund in support of Great Lakes peace agreement

world-bankThe World Bank Group has announced an amount of $1 billion in proposed new funding to help provide better health and education services, generate more cross-border trade, and fund hydroelectricity projects in support of the Great Lakes peace agreement that was signed by 11 countries in February.

This was on the first day of a three day trip to the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Rwanda and Uganda by World Bank Group President Dr. Jim Yong Kim and UN Secretary General, Ban Ki-moon.

In a press release issued on May 22, 2013, Kim said, “We made extraordinary efforts to secure an additional $1 billion in funding because we believe this can be a major contributor to a lasting peace in the Great Lakes region,” adding that, “this funding will help revitalize economic development, create jobs, and improve the lives of people who have suffered for far too long. Now the leaders of the Great Lakes region, by  restarting economic activity and improving livelihoods in border areas, can boost confidence, build economies, and give new opportunities for millions of people.”

The World Bank’s proposed additional funding includes roughly $100 million for supporting agriculture and rural livelihoods for internally displaced people and refugees in the region; $340 million to support the 80 megawatt Rusumo Falls hydroelectric project for Burundi, Rwanda, and Tanzania; $150 million for the rehabilitation of the Ruzizi I and II hydroelectric projects and financing for Ruzizi III, supplying electricity for Rwanda, Burundi, and DRC; $165 million toward building roads in DRC’s North and South Kivu and Province Orientale; $180 million for improving infrastructure and border management along the Rwanda-DRC border; and additional millions of dollars for public health laboratories,  fisheries, and trade facilitation programs among others, said the release.

Kim noted that, the new regional pledge, in zero-interest financing from the International Development Association (IDA), will support two major regional development priorities: recovery of livelihoods to  reduce the vulnerability of people living in the Great Lakes whose communities have suffered greatly during conflict in the region; and revitalizing  and expanding cross-border economic activity to spur greater opportunity and integration in the areas of agriculture, energy, transport  and regional trade.

By Dorcas Appiah

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