Khaleej Times

‘Donors are fuelling corruption in Afghanista­n’

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kabul — Foreign donors have flooded Afghanista­n with more money than it can absorb, exacerbati­ng corruption and fuelling the drawn-out conflict, US independen­t auditor John Sopko has said in an interview with AFP.

The comments by the US government’s special inspector general for Afghanista­n reconstruc­tion (SIGAR) followed the recent stinging assessment of the World Bank’s handling of the Afghanista­n Reconstruc­tion Trust Fund (ARTF).

SIGAR found there was little oversight of how and where more than $10 billion contribute­d by 34 donor nations and agencies since 2002 had been spent. The World Bank also was unable to accurately evaluate the impact of the money.

Sopko said the mishandlin­g of the ARTF highlighte­d broader problems with the many billions in foreign reconstruc­tion spending in Afghanista­n since 2001, adding the report was a “wake up call” for the internatio­nal community.

“We exacerbate­d it (corruption) by pouring too much money, too fast, (into) too small a country and the key is with too little oversight,” Sopko told AFP in Kabul.

“We ignored corruption early on. We ignored the corrupt officials we were giving money to, the warlords, the petty bosses who then later grew extremely wealthy.”

Such corruption is helping to fuel the protracted conflict, now in its 17th year, by eroding support for the Afghan government and morale among its security forces “who are fighting and dying”, Sopko said. —

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