AFRICA

WORLD BANK GIVES ETHIOPIA $300M FOR TIGRAY WAR RECOVERY

WORLD BANK GIVES ETHIOPIA $300M FOR TIGRAY WAR RECOVERY
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Faith Nyasuguta 

The World Bank has vowed to disburse $300 million targeting local communities whose lives have been destroyed by the Tigray war.

The funding issued under the International Development Association (IDA) is part of the bank’s Ethiopia project dubbed the Response-Recovery-Resilience for Conflict Communities.

A fraction of it will go to reconstructing local facilities such as health centres and other amenities in addition to helping locals get assistance for effects of war including sexual violations and gender based violence (GBV), the bank said.

The move by the global bank may have come as a shock since Ethiopia is battling accusations of atrocities by its own military in the war, claims it has dismissed.

Last week, the UN approved a budget for an independent probe by a specially assigned panel of three experts to look into the atrocities after rights watchdogs disclosed evidence of mass graves and interviewed people who claimed they had been tortured.

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The World Bank /Anadolu Agency/

By the end of last week, there were still accusations of restricting aid into Tigray, three weeks after Ethiopia formally granted humanitarian corridors.

The World Bank grant is set to renovate damaged social facilities like schools and hospitals as well as helping people begin a new life from the war.

“To urgently meet the needs of conflict-affected communities, mobile units will be dispatched to provide key services including in the areas of education, health, water, and sanitation,” a dispatch said.

The project will commence with areas in Afar, Amhara, Benishangul-Gumuz, Oromia and Tigray regions “which have been highly impacted by the recent conflict and host large numbers of internally displaced peoples (IDPs),” the bank said.

“This project will help to improve access to health, psychosocial support and legal services for GBV survivors in conflict-affected regions where quality response services are limited,” Ousmane Dione, World Bank Country Director for Eritrea, Ethiopia, South Sudan and Sudan added on Wednesday.

Some of the money will also support long-term investments in institutions, communities and policies for the conflict-afflicted communities.

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Faith Nyasuguta

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