A funding boost for Yemen’s political transition

The European Commission has announced a new aid package meant to help Yemen in its democratic transition. Photo by: T. Bertouille / ECHO / CC BY-SA

Yemen will be holding presidential elections in 2014, and the European Commission wants to make sure the country is ready.

The European Commission has set aside €18 million ($22.29 million) for democracy, civil registry, legal reform and decentralization initiatives in the country. It will be used to finance the following activities:

Yemen is currently undergoing political transition guided by the Gulf Cooperation Council-negotiated power transfer plan, which was accepted November 2011 by then President Ali Abdullah Saleh. The plan helped address the political crisis in the country. It includes steps such as the dismantling of armed militias, implementation of electoral reforms, review of the constitution, carrying out of a national dialogue and holding full-fledged presidential elections in early 2014.

Members of the international community have been supporting implementation of this plan, as well as addressing humanitarian and development needs in the country. There are, however, persisting concerns over Yemen’s readiness to implement projects and the rampant corruption there.

Read more news on Yemen and development aid online, and subscribe to The Development Newswire to receive top international development headlines from the world’s leading donors, news sources and opinion leaders — emailed to you FREE every business day.