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Cooperation Strategy 2013-2016

  • Cooperation Strategy Horn of Africa 2013–2016
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Famine
Newly arrived refugees from Somalia at Dagehaley camp. © Keystone

Countries in the Horn of Africa are undergoing a serious food crisis. Switzerland has decided to strengthen its support.

SDC Director Martin Dahinden in Ethiopia and Kenya (23.11.2012)
 One year since the approval of the special credit for the Horn of Africa (20.8.2012)


  • Crisis in the Horn of Africa
    Factsheet 12.3.2013
    Download (PDF, 161 KB) [de]  
Video

Horn of Africa (Somalia, Ethiopia, Kenya)

Website of the SDC in Horn of Africa (Somalia, Ethiopia, Kenya): www.swiss-cooperation.admin.ch/hornofafrica/

Food security, health, migration, good governance as well as State and peace building including conflict transformation are at the centre of the Cooperation Strategy 2013-2016 for the Horn of Africa. It builds on Switzerland’s past achievements in the region and underscores SDC’s commitment to working in fragile contexts. The strategy combines long-term development cooperation with existing humanitarian programmes and applies a «whole-of-government» approach.

The Horn of Africa is a new focus region for SDC, based on the Federal Message on International Cooperation 2013-2016.Politically Switzerland defines the Horn of Africa in a broader sense: «Greater Horn of Africa», including Sudan, South Sudan and Yemen. In its work, the SDC focuses on the smaller Horn of Africa: Somalia, Ethiopia and North/North-Eastern Kenya, but continues to engage in other areas of the Horn based on humanitarian needs.

Effects of ongoing conflicts
The fragmentation of Somalia, the separation of Sudan and South Sudan and the ongoing border dispute between Ethiopia and Eritrea have greatly affected the region for a long time. Parts of the population in the Horn of Africa experience political exclusion and economic marginalisation. Chronic and cyclic food insecurity, high climate variability and acute droughts in the (semi-) arid lands exacerbate the situation by creating a protracted humanitarian crisis.

Local conflicts over equitable access and share of natural resources are on the increase. Furthermore, the region accounts for the world’s highest maternal and child mortality rates, and mines and explosive remnants of war limit options for securing livelihoods. The combination of these challenges lead to forced migration and high numbers of internally displaced persons and refugees, most of whom are hosted by neighbouring countries:

Joint Swiss partnership
With a total budget of CHF 140.05m (94.32% from SDC), the Cooperation Strategy Horn of Africa 2013-2016 engages in conflict prone areas focusing on and around Somalia. It combines humanitarian aid and long-term development cooperation goals and projects into a «whole-of-government» approach, by the sharing of joint objectives, the development of synergies with other Swiss government actors, and the creation of a joint Swiss partnership with the Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD).

Switzerland’s engagement in the region is guided by the OECD-DAC «Principles for Good International Engagement in Fragile States and Situations», the «New Deal for Engagement in Fragile States», which sets peace building and State building Goals, and the Millennium Development Goals.

In pursuit of peace, stability and growth
With its new Cooperation Strategy 2013-2016 for the Horn of Africa Switzerland pursues the following interests and hypothesis of change:

  • People in the region gradually gain confidence in, and benefit from, their State institutions and services.
  • Despite temporary setbacks they are increasingly able to share and manage resources peacefully and take advantage of economic opportunities.
  • By addressing the long-term drivers of conflicts and poverty, which lie at the core of the fragility in the Horn of Africa, Switzerland supports the processes of conflict transformation and regional integration. The dynamics of the Somali conflict and conflicts concerning power and resource sharing are a particular focus.

Switzerland should achieve these aims using a number of instruments at regional and local/national levels: bilateral and multilateral instruments; core and earmarked contributions to government-owned and multi-donor projects or delegated cooperation agreements; possibly also locally managed development funds and/or direct implementation.

Swiss International Cooperation 2011
mill. CHF
2012
mill. CHF
2013*
mill. CHF
 
SDC
Bilateral development cooperation 0.23 1.51 5.00
Humanitarian aid 36.36 21.07
State Secretariat for Economic Affairs (SECO)
Economic Cooperation and Development
Total SDC/SECO 36.59 22.58 5.00
 
Other Federal Offices
FDFA Human Security Division and Directorate of International Law 0.59 0.68 0.11
Other FDFA Divisions 0.10 ..
Federal Department of Defence, Civil Protection and Sport (DDPS) 0.33 0.42 0.91
The State Secretariat for Education, Research and Innovation (SERI) 0.09 0.07 0.07
Total other Federal Offices 1.01 1.27 1.09
 
Cantons and municipalities 2.16 .. ..
 
Total 39.76 23.85 6.09
* planned; total based on available data
SDC figures excluding program contributions to NGOs
.. = figures not available | – = nil or amount < 5'000 CHF

SDC activities
Each of the Swiss government actors involved, in particular Switzerland’s Humanitarian Aid and SDC’s Regional Cooperation and Global Cooperation, contributes to the four areas of intervention in order to achieve the corresponding goals.

Food security/rural development
The aim is to increase food security and the resilience of communities living on (semi-) arid lands by strengthening their ability to cope with environmental and socio-economic change. Support will be focused on the strengthening, adaptation and diversification of their livelihood strategies.

Health
Improving the health status of the population in the geographic areas of intervention (arid/semi-arid lands), with a special focus on maternal and child health.

Good governance, State and peace building/conflict transformation
The goal is to strengthen the culture of accountable governance and peace dialogue at local, sub-national and national levels with a specific focus on the transformation of the Somali conflict and conflicts concerning power and resource sharing.

Migration
The target is to improve the protection of refugees, IDPs and migrants in the region, as well as improve migration management with a view to reduce vulnerability caused by irregular migration patterns.


Whole-of-government approach
A whole-of-government approach is applied in the Horn of Africa to ensure that Switzerland maximizes its positive impact and acts in a coherent and efficient manner. To achieve its overall goal in the «small» Horn of Africa, Switzerland combines:

This approach is in line with the Report on the Strategic Axes of Swiss Foreign Policy 2012-2015. A steering mechanism on the «Greater Horn of Africa» has been established, involving all the Swiss actors.


Switzerland’s long-term commitment
From 1990-2012, Switzerland’s Humanitarian Aid invested in reconstruction, rehabilitation and conflict transformation, mainly in the emerging nations during and after the civil wars. Since 2006, it has been active in the region (Somalia, Kenya, Ethiopia, Djibouti), with an annual budget ranging between CHF 14 and 20 millions. In 2011, the Swiss Federal Council granted an additional CHF 20m to the Humanitarian Aid to overcome the effects of the wide-spread drought and famine in the region, bringing the total budget to CHF 35m.
 
In 2009, a regional humanitarian Programme Office was re-established in Nairobi, Kenya. In 2010, a humanitarian antenna of the Cooperation Office opened in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. In 2011, Global interventions related to food security and water were added and are followed-up from the SDC office in Addis Ababa.
Since the beginning of the 21st century, Switzerland has actively supported peace- and State building as well as demining programmes.

Applying the lessons learned
The new Cooperation Strategy 2013-2016 is a direct response to the following lessons gained from these past engagements:


Background information on the Horn of Africa

Facts and figures
Kenya
Ethiopia
Somalia
Surface area
Population
Annual population growth rate (since 1990)

Life expectancy at birth  
women / men

Adult illiteracy rate: women / men
Gross Domestic Product GDP per capita
Percentage of population with less than 2 USD per day
580'367
41.610

2.7
       58.3 /56.0
15.8 /9.4
        808.0


..

km2
mill.

%
    years
%
        USD

%
1'104'300
82.734

2.1
     60.9 /57.7
..
   
      357.0


66.0

km2
mill.

%
      years
%
   USD

%
637'657
9.6

2.4

52.8 /49.6
..
           
..

..
km2
mill.

%
   years
%
   USD

%
Source: World Bank's World Development Indicators 2013

.. = figures not available

Background information provided by the BBC: Kenya
Background information provided by the BBC: Ethiopia
Background information provided by the BBC: Somalia


Local SDC contact address:

Horn of Africa (Somalia, Ethiopia, Kenya) (Nairobi)

Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation (SDC)
Embassy of Switzerland
General Mathenge Drive 89
Spring Valley, Westlands
P.O. Box 2600
00621 Nairobi

Phone +254 202 134 323
+254 706 210 297
Email nai.sdc@eda.admin.ch
Website www.swiss-cooperation.admin.ch/hornofafrica/

Additional Information and Documents

Here, you will find more publications, links, documents and articles about Swiss development cooperation and humanitarian aid in this country.