USAID announces some $50M in education funding in Somalia

Image

MOGADISHU, Somalia - The United States Agency for International Development (USAID) announced on Friday nearly $50 million in education funding in Somalia. 

In a statement, the U.S. embassy in the Somali capital of Mogadishu said the five-year program "aims to increase access to quality education and support accelerated learning for out-of-school children and youth who have been persistently left behind."

Dubbed "Bar Ama Baro", or Teach or Learn, the program brings funding for Somali education by USAID to $65 million.

"USAID is currently supporting a $10 million project implemented by UNICEF and a $5 million contribution to the Girls’ Education Challenge program managed by the United Kingdom’s Department for International Development," the statement added.

Somalia welcomed the announcement, saying: "More goodies & goodwill when governance is well driven."  

Norway helps Somalia clear external debt 

Norway also stepped in to help Mogadishu clear its external debt by promising to provide Somalia 3.135 billion Norwegian Krones (roughly $329 million) in form of a bridging loan.

"#Somalia is an important partner country for #Norway. Debt relief is essential if Somalia is to continue its stabilization & reform efforts. This is why Norway will provide a bridging loan of NOK 3,135 billion," the country's embassy to Somalia said on Twitter.

Norwegian Minister of Foreign Affairs Ine Eriksen Soreide said the loan would be an important contribution to promoting reform and stabilization in Somalia.

A third of Somalia’s debt is owed to the multilateral development banks including the World Bank and African Development Bank as well as the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

Related Articles

Iran war is latest blow to Somalia's malnourished children

Ruweido is on a regimen of three sachets a day, but Aamin has been turned away ​twice because the clinic had run out each time.

  • Somalia

    30-04-2026

  • 11:47AM

Three vessels hijacked off Somalia in a week, raising fears of piracy resurgence

By Tuesday morning, four more armed men had joined, bringing the number of pirates on board to 20, officials said.

  • Somalia

    29-04-2026

  • 08:18AM