Ban Approves $10 Million From UN Peacebuilding Fund for Nepal
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has approved $10 million in assistance to Nepal from the United Nations Peacebuilding
Fund, established two years ago to help countries emerging from conflict consolidate their gains and avoid slipping back
into bloodshed.
After Mr. Ban declared Nepal – which is rebuilding after the curtain fell in 2006 on its civil war which claimed over
13,000 lives – eligible for aid last December, nearly two dozen UN agencies and other partners reviewed how the world
body can help tackle challenges that lie ahead.
In April, the South Asian nation held polls for the Constituent Assembly. The following month, it abolished its
240-year-old monarchy and is now the Federal Democratic Republic of Nepal.
“With the elections behind us, we have entered a complex period of transition in Nepal, with heightened expectations
from the Nepalese people, two thirds of whom live on less than $2 a day,” said Ian Martin, the Secretary-General’s
Special Representative and head of the UN peacekeeping mission in the country, known as a UNMIN.
The nation’s parties are now tasked with deciding on the structure of the new State, drafting a constitution and
addressing the issue of the two armies in the countries.
“Strengthening the State’s capacity to sustain peace is a priority area” for support from the Peacebuilding Fund, said
Robert Piper, UN Resident Coordinator in Nepal.
Possible target areas for the funds include supporting the Constituent Assembly and promoting human rights; recovery of
communities and areas hit-hard by conflict though food-and-cash-for-work schemes and other initiatives; and conflict
prevention and the promotion of reconciliation.
Nearly $270 million has been contributed to the Fund by dozens of nations and groups since its launch in October 2006,
surpassing its $250 million funding target.
“The Peacebuilding Fund approach is based on the recognition that stable peace must be built on social, economic and
political foundations that serve the needs of the population,” the Secretary-General wrote in a report made public
earlier this month.
ENDS