FILE PHOTO: Quareebullahi Ajenifuja, 12, and Joy Adeniji, 12, take notes together during class at Ilorin Grammar school, in Ilorin, Kwara state, Nigeria, March 26, 2021. REUTERS/Temilade Adelaj

LAGOS, Sept 30 (Reuters) – The World Bank has approved a $1.57 billion financing package for Nigeria under a new programme to support its health and education sectors and help provide sustainable power, the bank said on Monday.

The World Bank is the largest lender to Nigeria, with more than $15 billion in loans at the end of March, data from the Debt Management Office showed.

The bank said in a statement that the money would help increase availability and effectiveness of financing for basic education and primary healthcare service delivery.

“The new financing includes $500 million for addressing governance issues that constrain the delivery of education and health, $570 million for the Primary Healthcare Provision Strengthening Program and $500 million for the Sustainable Power and Irrigation for Nigeria Project,” the bank said.

Nigeria is among countries with the highest number of out of school children mainly due to insecurity, especially in the north of the country where a long-running Islamist insurgency and armed kidnapping gangs have caused havoc.

The World Bank said part of the money would be used to improve dam safety to protect people from floods.

Nigeria faces frequent flooding and this year up to a million people were affected after a dam in northeastern Borno state burst.

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More floods are expected in Nigeria after authorities in Cameroon started releasing water from a large dam to prevent it from overflowing.

(Reporting by MacDonald Dzirutwe, editing by Ed Osmond)