Ivory Coast said Monday it would spend around $430 million in a three-year campaign to support young people in border regions at risk from Sahel jihadists.
“As part of the fight against vulnerability in northern areas, particularly the six regions bordering Burkina Faso and Mali, the government has launched an ambitious program of integration and infrastructure for education and health,” Youth Minister Mamadou Toure told AFP.
The cost amounts to “405 million euros,” he said.
The Gulf of Guinea country has suffered sporadic cross-border attacks over the past two years.
Armed incursions have also affected neighboring Ghana, Togo, and Benin, strengthening fears of a southward push from the Sahel towards the coast.
Under the new plan, the government will earmark 33 billion CFA francs ($53 million) to provide 60,000 young people with professional training, apprenticeships, and startup financing.
“Along with the military response, we want… to develop an ambitious social program to… give young people prospects to prevent them from becoming easy targets for jihadist movements,” Toure said.
“Many young people sometimes have difficulty integrating after attending madrassas,” or Koranic schools, he added.