India dishes out US $10 bn for Africa’s healthcare
OREANDA-NEWS. May 26, 2016. The Export-Import Bank of India (EXIM) has announced a US \\$10-billion health facility for Africa at the ongoing 51st African Development Bank (AfDB) Annual Meetings in Lusaka.
Exim Bank of India Chairman Yaduvendra Mathur said the Government of India has approved a US \\$10-billion health facility, which would be rolled out to the African continent.
“We will be rolling out US \\$10 billion to the African continent specifically meant for health care and this has been approved by the Government of India,” Mathur said at the Africa-India Partnership Day.
They were sharing India’s experiences in implementing projects in the healthcare sector with Africa.
This is the 4th edition of the Africa-India Partnership Day taking place at the Annual Meetings, which has attracted over 4,000 delegates and participants this year.
Zambia’s Health Minister Joseph Kasonde said, “We came into government with a clear policy on universal health coverage, to us this meant three things, namely: access to increasing health care, quality of health care in our institution and nobody should be subjected to pay for health care through their pocket.”
Kasonde said the Government of India through the Exim Bank was assisting Zambia set up 650 health posts across the country.
“We are now in discussion about the public-private partnership (PPP) arrangement with India to improve the healthcare systems in our country, therefore diminishing the need for people to travel for treatment,” he said.
Kasonde said the Government of Zambia would soon introduce a health policy to alleviate the difficulties people are facing in paying for health care services.
Speaking at the Africa-India Partnership Day, AfDB Acting Vice-President, Sector Operations, Kapil Kapoor, said, “Africa is transforming and is transforming rapidly. Over US \\$60 billion in investment is needed for the continent over the next five years.”
Kapoor said India was better place to help Africa in the areas of investments saying that the demand for jobs exceeds the supply by 8 million jobs each year.
Giving an overview on India’s experiences in the PPP model, Additional Secretary in the Ministry of Finance Dinesh Sharma indicated that the PPP model have worked well in the power generation projects, roads and transport sector.
Sharma said, “Health care cannot be done by the government alone. We need the private sector to help develop the health sector.”
AfDB Executive Director Heikki Tuunanen announced at the Africa-India Partnership Day that India will host the 2017 AfDB Annual Meetings.
“I don’t think I will be breaking any protocols here, but I would like to announce that AfDB Annual Meetings next year…We look forward to going to India,” Tuunanen said.
At the event, a research paper was released by the Exim Bank entitled India-Africa Healthcare Cooperation: Way Forward.
This year’s AfDB theme is “Energy and Climate Change”, and draws on one of the African Development Banks’s “High 5” priority areas, namely to “Light up and Power Africa”.
It also reflects the AfDB’s New Deal on Energy for Africa and the key resolutions from the recent United Nations (UN) climate talks (COP21) on global warming.
The 2016 Annual Meetings theme is aligned with two of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs): SDG 7 to “ensure access to affordable, reliable, sustainable and modern energy for all” and SDG 13 to “take urgent action to combat climate change and its impacts”.
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