|
Press
Release
January 29,
2002
Contact:
Omar Zakhilwal
Phone:
613-951-2937
E-mail:
info@institute-for-afghan-studies.org
For Immediate Release
Institute For Afghan Studies
(IAS)
Press Release
“Tokyo
Donor Conference on Reconstruction of Afghanistan Falls Short
of Expectations!”
The
Tokyo conference fell short of U.N. Secretary General Kofi
Annan's goal of raising USD 10 billion over the next 5 years.
The 61 donor nations and the World Bank pledged USD 1.8
billion in fiscal 2002 as part of a USD 4.5 billion commitment
over the next five years. Aside from being insufficient the
current pledges may not all turn into actual contribution from
experiences and examples elsewhere.
For a
pledge to become a viable money unit it has to make it through
several layers of bureaucracy. There can be problems at every
step of the way and the end result would be for the actual
usable money at the field to be only a fraction of the
promised amount. The fate of an emergency start-up fund
created in December to finance Afghanistan's interim
government highlights the difficulty ahead. Only $9.7 million
of the $17 million fund had reached Kabul as of January 17.
The head
of the interim administration of Afghanistan, Hamid Karzai,
returned to Kabul with a handful of promises that fell short
of expectations. The task that lies before his month-old
government is vast and complex. The Afghan economy is in ruin,
the physical infrastructure is destroyed, more than two-thirds
of Afghanistan's adults are illiterate, half its children are
chronically malnourished, electricity is largely unavailable,
and the country's harsh landscape remains strewn with land
mines that kill or maim thousands each year.
There are plenty of reasons why the rich West should reach
deeper into its pockets.
First, battered as Afghanistan's infrastructure already was
before Sept. 11, it has since been almost entirely flattened.
Considering that the War Against Terrorism is costing the
United States more than USD1 billion each month, it is hard to
believe that the United States is offering a meager USD 297
million. Similarly, the leading Muslim country, Saudi Arabia
pledged only USD 67 million a year for a three-year period.
Other oil rich Muslim Gulf States seem to have side tracked
from their cries of Muslim solidarity. Second, as with any
other impoverished nation, aid will foster economic stability
and trade with other countries while diluting the appeal of
political extremism. Third, it can be argued that because
Afghanistan's difficulties over the years have been compounded
by foreign interference, the world has a particular obligation
to help.
The
Institute for Afghan Studies believes that while aid by
Afghanistan’s neighbors is deeply appreciated, it should in no
way be given or received in a spirit other than fraternal
feelings for the Afghan nation. The IAS also questions the
rather silent attitude of the Russian government, who as a
direct heir of the former Soviet Empire, should have taken up
the issue of payment of war damages to Afghanistan.
The
Institute for Afghan Studies believes that there is need for a
series of conferences regarding world participation in the
reconstruction of Afghanistan and that those conferences
should go deeper into the issue of pledging aid in a bid to
addressing the real needs of the country. These conferences
should be planned as soon as possible. Afghan authorities and
the United Nations can work together on this issue.
|