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| German Development Cooperation in Sri Lanka |
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The German Development
Cooperation (GTZ) is a governmental implementation
agency for international cooperation. GTZ operates in around
130 countries in Africa, Asia, Latin America and Eastern
Europe. In its global activities GTZ mostly operates on
behalf of the German Federal Ministry for Development and
Cooperation (BMZ) but also on behalf of
the World Bank, regional development banks, the European
Union as well as the specialized organizations of the United
Nations. The multi-facetted tasks of GTZ encompass not only
the dissemination of knowledge but also the transfer of
organizational and business-related know-how. GTZ’s
services are increasingly in demand for facilitating dialogue
between the state, the economy and the civil society.
The overarching goal of all GTZ activities is poverty alleviation.
However, there is an increasing recognition about the importance
of peace building measures to be incorporated
into development cooperation. Supporting projects in the
conflict affected areas of Sri Lanka GTZ has the capacity
to develop new fields of expertise by focusing not only
on political and constitutional aspects of peace building
but also on the role of development interventions in a conflict
context.
The bilateral cooperation between Germany and Sri
Lanka has a record of more than forty years of
successful project implementation and has seen the building
up of a close cooperation between Germany and Sri Lankan
partner organizations. In accordance with the Poverty Reduction
Strategy of the Sri Lankan Government and the poverty alleviation
goal of the German development policy the two governments
jointly agreed in 2001 upon two focal areas for their bilateral
development cooperation. These are to provide support to
the following Sri Lankan Government initiatives:
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The economic reform agenda, and |
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The relief, rehabilitation and reconciliation (RRR)
framework. |
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The two focal areas
are supported by the ongoing assistance to the educational
reform of the Sri Lankan Government. In these complementary
areas, the Federal Republic of Germany via GTZ supports
a total of 26 projects throughout Sri Lanka. |
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| Support to the economic reform agenda |
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One of the central objectives
of the Government of Sri Lanka is to restore economic growth
and thereby effectively create sustainable employment and
income. In order to achieve this challenging objective a
multiple reform process has been initiated. The pillars
of these economic reforms are: |
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Development of a supportive macro-economic
environment, |
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Up-grading of infrastructure to connect poor regions
to those which are fast growing, and |
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Investment in human resources development. |
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It is a shared view
among the German and the Sri Lankan Governments that poverty
alleviation will only be successful if sufficient productive
and income-generating employment is created. Employment,
however, depends on long-term and balanced economic growth
driven by a competitive private sector and on the availability
of well-qualified people.
GTZ, on behalf of the German Federal Ministry for Economic
Development and Cooperation, contributes to the following
areas of the Sri Lankan Government’s reform agenda:
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Regional economic development, and |
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Vocational training and private sector promotion. |
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In the area of regional
economic development, the GTZ cooperates with the Regional
Economic Advancement Program (REAP) of
the Ministry of Plan Implementation. Through years of bilateral
development cooperation in the vocational training sector,
GTZ has build up a close cooperation with the National Apprentice
and Industrial Training Authority and the Vocational Training
Authority of Sri Lanka. |
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| Support to the educational reform |
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To support the educational
reform of the Sri Lankan Government in the most effective
way the bilateral development cooperation between Sri Lanka
and Germany focuses on the Basic Education Sector Program
(BESP). The Program was set up in 1998
with the goal of improving the teaching-learning process
and to achieve basic competencies at the primary stage.
To achieve this objective, BESP works in close collaboration
with the Central Ministry of Education as well as the Provincial
Ministries of Education and the National Institute of Education
(NIE).
The BESP consists of the following four components:
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Material development and training, |
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Teacher in-service training, |
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Monitoring and evaluation, and |
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Basic education for children in under-privileged areas. |
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BESP not only contributes
to educational reforms which in turn complements the bilateral
development cooperation in the economic area but also to
the relief, reconciliation and rehabilitation reform framework
of the Sri Lankan Government. The basic education for the
children in under-privileged areas (BECARE)
is such a component of BESP. It was piloted in Vavuniya
and will be extended to other parts of the country. Under
this project needy Tamil and Sinhala children are selected
to carry out activities that will help them compensate for
lost education, build confidence, and ultimately enable
them to rejoin the educational mainstream and live as normal
citizens. Psychosocial counseling plays an important role
in these activities.
In accordance with national priorities BESP also supports
the strengthening of the use of English as a bridge and
mediator language. The encouragement of trilingual ability
substantially contributes to the reduction of language usage
conflicts and serves as a sign of mutual acceptance. Additionally,
themes such as human and children’s rights, and living
and working together are increasingly brought into teacher’s
training and are introduced into the schools and lives of
Sri Lankan citizens.
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| Support to the relief, reconciliation and
rehabilitation (RRR) framework |
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In the 2001 bilateral
negotiations the Sri Lankan and German Government jointly
agreed to include the support of the relief, reconciliation
and rehabilitation framework as a new focal area in their
bilateral development cooperation. The German Federal Ministry
for Economic Cooperation and Development assigned GTZ with
the task of implementing the support provided by the German
Government.
The German Government’s approach towards supporting
the RRR reform agenda of the Sri Lankan Government focuses
on the incorporation of conflict transformation into development
cooperation rather than dealing with it in an isolated manner.
GTZ’s continuant and widespread representation in
Sri Lanka as well as its target group orientation positively
contributes towards the highly sensitive issue of conflict
transformation.
The contribution of the bilateral development cooperation
to the RRR framework is based on a four-folded approach.
This includes the following:
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Conflict sensitivity of development-oriented
rehabilitation projects, |
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Mainstreaming of crises prevention and conflict transformation, |
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Peace-building emphasis of educational projects, and |
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Capacity building of civil society structures for
conflict management. |
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The German Government
promotes conflict sensitivity within development-oriented
rehabilitation projects in the conflict-affected areas of
Sri Lanka. As such, the peace-building contributions of
projects such as the Jaffna Rehabilitation Project ( JRP),
the Integrated
Food Security Program Trincomalee (IFSP)
and the North-East Community Restoration and Development
Project ( NECORD) are to be strengthened
and their direct support towards the RRR Framework increased.
Through its development cooperation, the German Government
further aims at embodying crises prevention and conflict
transformation as a crosscutting issue in all bilateral
development projects in Sri Lanka. Therefore, joint projects
geared at economic reforms, such as the Enterprise Service
Systems Promotion Project ( ESSP - Kandy)
and the Sri Lanka-German CEFE Program (Colombo),
will also integrate peace and conflict impact assessment
into the planning, implementation, monitoring and evaluation
of their activities.
Strengthening the peace-building emphasis of bilateral projects
in areas of educational reform is another field of interventions.
Through incorporating the topic of conflict transformation
in certain fields of teacher training or through establishing
exchange programs for students and teachers, the understanding
of the “other” culture may be increased and
xenophobic tendencies reduced.
Another program supported by the Centre for International
Migration ( CIM), a joint cooperation between
the GTZ and the German Federal Employment Institute that
is placing experienced German and European experts in partner
organizations abroad, is building up capacities within Sri
Lanka Universities for applied research and teaching on
poverty and conflict related topics. The IMCAP
program is affiliated to the Development Studies Institute
of the University of Colombo, but has also established links
to the Eastern University, Batticaloa as well as the Jaffna
University.
In addition, the German Government
supports the capacity building of Sri Lankan civil society
structures for conflict management through the establishment
of a Fund for Local Initiatives for Conflict Transformation
( FLICT). This new project envisages a joint
approach with the Department for International Development
of the Government of Great Britain.
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For more information please contact
GTZ-Office, 29/23 Visaka Road, Colombo 4,
Tel: 01-508505/9, Fax: 01-551524, Email:
gtzoff@sltnet.lk |
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