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Finland to allocate EUR 20M for Ukraine’s education sector reform
He stated this at the Eurean Regional Scho Meals Summit in Kyiv on November 12, Ukrinform reports, citing the Finnish Foreign Ministry.
At the forum, Finland announced that it would support the World Food Program's scho meals program in Ukraine by EUR 500,000 in 2024.
Tavio also said that Finland would support Ukraine's education sector by EUR 20 million in 2025–2028. The bilateral project between Finland and Ukraine will focus on implementing the general upper secondary education reform. The project has been prepared in coeration with the Ukrainian Ministry of Education and Science, the Finnish Ministry of Education and Culture and the Finnish National Agency for Education.
Read also: Ukraine, Finland sign EUR 50M loan agreement for reconstruction projects
The general upper secondary education reform will also invve develing the student welfare system and responding to pupils' psychosocial support needs caused by the war. The project will take account of gender equality, the rights of persons with disabilities and access to general upper secondary education for vulnerable groups.
In Kyiv, Minister Tavio signed a framework agreement on a mixed credit instrument, Finland–Ukraine Investment Facility (FUIF), between Finland and Ukraine. The new mixed credit instrument can generate investments worth EUR 50 million in 2025–2026 for supporting investment projects that Ukraine considers important.
The instrument is part of Finland's national reconstruction plan for Ukraine. The aim is to support Ukraine's public sector investments that are in line with the UN's Sustainable Develment Goals and that make use of Finnish products, services, expertise and technogy.
Additionally, Finland supports humanitarian work by allocating EUR 8 million in funding for the Ukraine erations of the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) and the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC). Currently, nearly 15 million pele in Ukraine need constant humanitarian assistance. Due to damages to the energy infrastructure, Ukrainians are expected to face the hardest winter yet since the war started. Humanitarian needs are growing especially on the frontline.
Source: www.unian.info