The leaders of Kenya and
Ethiopia promised on Monday to create jobs, reduce poverty and foster trade in
their restive borderlands, where conflict has intensified in recent years. The US$200 million
project aims to create a trade and investment hub along the remote 860 km (530
mile) border where human, arms and drug trafficking are rife, the head of the
United Nations in Kenya, Nardos Bekele-Thomas, said.
Thomson Reuters report continues:
"The
problem here is poverty," she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
"It's just hopelessness that creates insecurity."
Clashes
between herding communities over grazing land, water and cattle have become
increasingly deadly due to an influx of guns, as well as political power
struggles and fast-growing populations.
The
aftermath of violence in the Kenyan border town of Moyale in March 2012.
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Kenya's
army was sent to restore order to the border town of Moyale, 800km (500 miles)
north of the capital Nairobi, in 2013 after dozens were killed and villages
were burned to the ground in a jostle for power between rival clan militias.
Around
two-thirds of the population of Kenya's Marsabit County - more than 70,000
people - fled, mostly to Ethiopia's Borana Zone where many have relatives, the
U.N. said.
"We
can exchange conflict and insecurity for peace and prosperity," Kenya's
President Uhuru Kenyatta told dignitaries seated in a white tent decorated with
the two countries' national colours.
"We
shall work together to ensure that Moyale becomes the Dubai of the Horn of
Africa," he added, referring to the Middle Eastern trade hub.
A
tarmac road linking Nairobi and the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa is due to be
completed by September 2016, he said.
Restoring
peace will be a challenge. The arid region is awash with guns due to its
proximity to unstable Somalia where al Qaeda-linked militants have been
fighting to topple the government.
Ethiopian
soldiers also make sporadic incursions into Kenya in pursuit of Oromo
Liberation Front rebels.
Many
homesteads have guns to deter invaders, while herders often carry firearms to
protect their animals because there is little police presence.
With
the support of Western donors and the World Bank, the government’s plan to
diversify the livestock-dominated local economies and improve access to water,
education and healthcare.
Eight
in ten residents of Marsabit County live below the poverty line, government
data shows.
Security
officials held back large crowds who lined the road to watch the lengthy convoy
of officials speed through the town.
Among
them, 18-year-old Abdi Aden Adow said governments should boost cross-border
trade as frequent droughts have pushed his family, who keep goats and camels,
into poverty.
"There
is no rain," he said. "Life is very hard."
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