HC Deb 06 June 1957 vol 571 cc142-3W
Mr. J. Johnson

asked the Secretary of State for the Colonies if he will give particulars of the economic projects in Somaliland which the Protectorate Government have begun to date, and those which are to be started during 1957.

Mr. Lennox-Boyd

I assume that the first part of the Question refers to economic projects which are still in progress. These are as follows—the amounts shown being those so far allocated in schemes approved under the 1955 Colonial Development and Welfare Act:

£
Hides and skins (to improve their quality) 33,440
Agricultural credit (loans to farmers—revolving fund) 7,760
Camel abattoir (to cull old animals and produce fertilisers and other products) 68,000
Date cultivation (for the experimental growing of date palms) 39,000
Fisheries (to investigate the possibility of establishing an organised fishing industry) 5400
Bonification (improvement of agricultural land) 21,700
Transport pool for agricultural schemes 7,662
Experimental farms (to provide facilities for agricultural research and controlled experiment) 4,750
Forestry development 108,600
Range management (improvement of pasture land) 8,768
Agricultural education (for the training of agricultural instructors, forest rangers and stock inspectors) 2,500
Irrigation and soil conservation 57,900
Hydrological survey (to establish possible sources of water supply) 24,890
Improvement of Hargeisa water supply 80,000
Geological survey 58,876
Total: £529,246

Some of the above schemes represents continuations of schemes started under the 1945 Colonial Development and Welfare Act, e.g., under that earlier Act, £41,556 was spent on date cultivation, and £74,372 was allocated for geological survey.

Economic projects which are expected to be started in 1957 are:

£
Improvement of Berbera Port, approx 300,000
Rural water supplies 20,000
Construction of a gum and incense warehouse in Aden (to provide storage for gum and incense, so that Somaliland may obtain additional revenue from sales and to enable the Somaliland merchants to obtain economics prices by avoiding forced sales) 18,900
£358,900

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