Skip to main content

Les maires de l ’Artibonite formés à la gestion fiscale [QIP DA07_001]

Organisée par la Section des Affaires Civiles du bureau de la MINUSTAH de l'Artibonite, une formation sur la problématique fiscale a débuté le 5 Mai à l'Hôtel Xaragua, près de la ville de Saint Marc. L'objectif principal de la formation est de renforcer les connaissances des maires en matière d'élaboration de Plan de Développement Communal (PDC) et leurs capacités en techniques de taxations.

Cette formation qui s'inscrit dans le cadre du programme d'appui institutionnel de la MINUSTAH est financée à travers un Projet à Impact Rapide (Quick Impact Project - QIP) destiné à permettre la réalisation d'une série des formations au profit des autorités locales.

Cliquez pour lire l'ensemble de cet article.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

How Aid in Cash, Not Goods, Averted A Famine In Somalia

“ Increasingly, it became clear that a new flow of international aid, cash, and not goods, worked to mitigate the risks of an immediate famine. For now, in spite of acute risks in some parts of the country, Somalia has successfully averted a food crisis,” How Aid in Cash, Not Goods, Averted A Famine In Somalia 08 September - Source: IPS News - 594 Words In February, when the government of Somalia sounded an alarm to the UN about risks of a famine in the country, the UN’s Office of Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), besides quickly shuffling a response team, was acting from a steep sense of history. The Office, instead of sending out massive aid packages, distributed cash vouchers to families who could spend it to buy goods according to their needs. The famine between the years 2010 and 2012, which killed more than a quarter of a million people in the country, offered important lessons to the aid community. This spring, when poor rainfall led to large scale crop failure...

UN Peacekeeping Set To Benefit From New Environmental Practices, According To New UNEP Report

New York, 1 May 2012 - The United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) has today released the findings of a two-year analysis of how peacekeeping missions around the world affect, and are affected by, natural resources and the broader environment. In addition to highlighting the utmost importance of reducing the environmental impact of UN Peacekeeping operations, the new report states that the implementation of good practice in this area also has additional benefits, including increased financial savings for missions, and improved safety and security for local communities as well as UN Peacekeeping staff. The 16 missions currently led by the Department of Peacekeeping Operations (DPKO) and supported by the Department of Field Support (DFS) constitute the largest environmental footprint in the UN system. Entitled Greening the Blue Helmets: Environment, Natural Resources and UN Peacekeeping Operations, the report notes that through the adoption of a 2009 Environmental Po...