The Islamic Development
Bank (IDB) — a bank set up by 56 Islamic nations — has approved financial
assistance worth $617 million (Rs 54.16 billion) for development projects in
different countries including Nepal.
The board meeting of the
bank has decided to support education projects in Nepal, Botswana, Thailand and
Fiji — non-member countries. The non-member grant has provided $750,000 (Rs
65.84 million) from the Waqf Fund for various projects, it said. However, the
bank has not given details of the projects.
According to the bank,
the amount will be disbursed in areas of education ($174 million for
Indonesia), electricity ($319.6 million for Iran, Uganda and Bangladesh),
agriculture ($80 million for Morocco), sanitation ($15 million for Maldives)
and health ($10 million for Mozambique).
The board members
concurred to raise IDB’s participation in the capital of the Istanbul-based
'Kuwait Turkish Participation Bank Inc' by nearly $18 million to $65 million.
The board took note of
technical assistance grants of $450,000 approved by the President to
Afghanistan for the education sector and to ASEAN, which includes three IDB
member countries — Brunei Darussalam, Indonesia and Malaysia — for the fishing
sector.
Bearing in mind the
success of IDB’s medium-term note programme and the rising financing needs in
its member countries, the board agreed to raise the size of IDB’s Sukuk
programme from $6.5 billion to $10 billion. It is worth mentioning that IDB’s
cumulative Sukuk issuance since August 2003 is expected to reach $7 billion by
the end of November 2013.
The Islamic Development
Bank is a multilateral development financing institution located in Jeddah,
Saudi Arabia. It was founded in 1973 by the Finance Ministers at the first
Organisation of the Islamic Conference (now called the Organisation of Islamic
Cooperation.
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