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Afghanistan to seek $50 billion more aid for five years Thu. May 15, 2008 04:26 am.- By Bonny Apunyu. -
(SomaliNet) Despite growing criticism that aid money is being wasted, Afghanistan will ask international donors next month for $50 to fund a five-year development plan, a presidential aide said.
Ishaq Nadiri, senior economic adviser to President Hamid Karzai, told reporters late on Tuesday that about $14 billion is to go toward improving deteriorating security, but the key target is reviving the decrepit agricultural sector.
Nadiri said the plan will be presented to international donors June 12 in Paris. "We expect a strong political commitment to Afghanistan.". Afghanistan is struggling to recover from a quarter century of war.
Over than six years after the ouster of the hardline Taliban regime, the Afghanistan is mired in poverty and insurgent attacks are increasing. It also produces about 93 per cent of the world's opium, the raw material of heroin.
The slow pace of development is shambling public support for Karzai's Western-backed government as Afghans grapple with food shortages and the sharply rising cost of living. Official corruption is endemic.
"We are building a state, and that is a costly exercise," Nadiri said. "The country had lost its human, physical and social capital ... the collapse of Afghanistan was total."
An estimated 34 per cent to 42 per cent of Afghans still live below the poverty line.
Despite significant improvements in healthcare, Afghanistan has the world's second-highest maternal mortality rate. It is also highly dependent on aid.
The United Nations, Nato and other international institutions are trying to better coordinate military and civilian reconstruction, widely regarded as fragmented and ineffectual.
There is growing concern over how the aid money is spent.
Since 2001, the international community has pledged $25 billion in help but has delivered only $15 billion, according to a report by the Agency Coordinating Body for Afghan Relief, an alliance of 94 international aid agencies.
Some 40 per cent of it - or $6 billion - goes back to donor countries in corporate profits.-AP
News Category: World
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