Launch the First Peace-Building Water Project in Darfur?
06 December, 2012
The African Water Facility, the Government of Sudan and the African Development Bank Jointly Launch the First Peace-Building Water Project in Darfur
KHARTOUM, /5/12/2012/ (AfDB) ( SUDANOW) Over 750,000 people from three Darfur states will have improved access to water supply and sanitation through a €3.3 million African Water Facility (AWF) grant.
The project was recently launched during two separate ceremonies held on November 25 in Sudan’s capital, Khartoum, and on November 29 in El Fasher, North Darfur State capital.
The ceremony was organized under the auspices of the Government of Sudan jointly with the African Development Bank (AfDB) and attended by representatives from the African Water Facility, the federal government ministries and institutions, as well as the beneficiary States.
The AWF grant will finance the preparation of bankable investment plans to leverage the US $100 million in financing required to meet the medium and longer term water and sanitation needs of the inhabitants in 15 to 20 small rural towns in Darfur, as well as neighboring pastoralists and nomadic peoples.
The grant will also be used to undertake priority rehabilitation works on water infrastructure and to demonstrate integrated approaches to meeting domestic, institutional, commercial livestock and small-scale farming, water and sanitation needs in about six of these small rural towns.
Overall, the project will help address the destructive impact of prolonged conflict on water infrastructure, which is exacerbated by disputes over water resources, particularly between pastoralist, nomadic and settled populations.
Abdul B. Kamara, AfDB Resident Representative in Sudan, represented the AfDB during the ceremony in Khartoum, also attended by Akissa Bahri, AWF Coordinator, along with AWF and Sudan Field Office (SDFO) technical staff.
“The AWF grant is expected to have ripple effect by preparing the ground for additional investment to support the people of Sudan,” said Kamara.
“The AWF is proud to collaborate with the Government of Sudan to ensure that the water needs of the people are met,” reiterated Bahri. “The project perfectly aligns with AWF’s mid-term strategy where it commits to strengthen support to fragile or conflict-affected countries, often prone to water-related clashes, and where AWF support is all the more relevant.”
The Federal level launch in Khartoum was presided over by Abdelrahman Dirar, Sudan’s State Minister of Finance and National Economy, together with the State Minister of Water Resources and Electricity, Tabita Butross.
“This project of is of extreme significance for the Darfur region,” said Dirar in his opening remarks. “The region has suffered tremendously from serious water shortages that have triggered and continue to fuel conflict in the region; we have high hopes for this project.”
The State-level launch in Darfur was chaired by Osman M. Yousif Kibbir, the Governor of North Darfur State, who reiterated the timeliness of the project in helping to consolidate peace that is just crystallizing in the region. Kibbir further commended the AfDB and AWF for their efforts to help Darfur find its way out of conflict, while emphasizing the importance of implementing this project efficiently to open up opportunities for further development projects. The launch in Darfur was also attended by State Ministers, Parliamentarians and other dignitaries from other Darfur States.
About the African Water Facility (AWF)
The AWF is an initiative of the African Ministers’ Council on Water (AMCOW) hosted by the African Development Bank (AfDB), established in 2004 as a Special Water Fund to help African countries achieve the objectives of the Africa Water Vision 2025. The AWF offers grants from €50,000 to €5 million to support projects aligned with its mission and strategy to a wide range of institutions and organizations operating in Africa. Its three strategic priority activities are :
(1) preparing investment projects to mobilise investment funds for projects supported by AWF;
(2) enhancing water governance to create an environment conducive for effective and sustainable investments;
(3) promoting water knowledge for the preparation of viable projects and informed governance leading to effective and sustainable investments. Since 2006, AWF has funded 73 national and regional projects in 50 countries, including in Africa's most vulnerable states. It has mobilized more than €532 million as a result of its project preparation activities, which constitute 70 percent of its portfolio. On average, each €1 contributed by the AWF has attracted €20 in additional follow-up investment.
The AWF is entirely funded by Algeria, Australia, Austria, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Burkina Faso, Canada, Denmark, the European Commission, France, Norway, Senegal, Spain, Sweden, the United Kingdom, and the African Development Bank.