of poor working conditions. I have mentioned this elsewhere before. These guys are fighting their LOOTenants and Al-Shabab. The military budget continues to baloon, but they have nothing to show for it. AMISOM is fully funded as far as I can tell, and they are getting 20 bob(40 bob for married ones) a day for hardship allowance. 6 to 12 USD a month.
That's quite a chunk of change ... better not spend it all in one place! For more, consider charcoal and sugar ...
The figures in this Daily-Nation report appear accurate (at least as far as intentions go):
http://www.nation.co.ke/news/-/1056/3053596/-/qk83vtz/-/index.html(The word "allowance" is interesting, as it suggests something on top of a salary; such a view would find support in some EU documentation on the matter.)
At the time this article came out, the EU stated that it would reduce funding because of "conflicting priorities". Then it stated that the reason was that the AU had last year committed itself to making a contribution to the tab and then promptly forgotten about it. Which is true, and, indeed, the AU was very busy railing against neo-colonial, imperialism ...
The real story came out in May/June when the EU indicated that what had really pissed them off were "accounting irregularities". And would someone please explain, or no more money. I don't know about the EU diplomats in East Africa, but I know that where my compatriots are involved, "accounting irregularities" are part of the cost of doing business. Put them under "contingencies", or something, in the budget.
"
These guys are fighting ...": I don't know about that. "These guys" are known to be very fierce when it comes to dealing with civilians---Mt. Elgon, Wagalla, etc.---but I would not directly extend that to fighting. We have little information on such. Take, as an example, the El-Ade disaster earlier this year. At the time, plenty in the Kenyan media, plenty of promises from the government .... and then? What happened, how many Kenyans died, ... ?