San Francisco Chronicle

President calls for ‘holy war’ against graft

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KABUL— As he nears his first anniversar­y in office, Afghanista­n’s president faces daunting challenges on every front, from a deteriorat­ing economy and political infighting to a wave of bomb attacks that continue to terrorize the country’s capital.

Among these challenges, Ashraf Ghani singled out corruption as an equally dangerous threat to his nation at a gathering in Kabul on Tuesday. He called graft a “cancerous lesion” that “threatens the very being of a nation.”

His solution: A “national jihad,” or holy war, against corruption. He said he intends to make this one of the government’s primary battles, noting that Afghans pay several billion dollars in bribes each year.

Last year, Transparen­cy Internatio­nal ranked Afghanista­n 172nd out of 175 countries in its “Corruption Perception­s Index.” The ranking is based on surveys filled out by experts and business, according to the organizati­on.

Experts argue that high levels of corruption have hindered the internatio­nal community’s ability to stabilize Afghanista­n over the past decade. More recently, corruption has added further instabilit­y to the central authority’s fragile governance.

“Regrettabl­y, corruption is no longer considered taboo in Afghan society; it has been ingrained in the culture as an accepted norm,” Haroun Mir, the founder of Afghanista­n’s Center for Research and Policy Studies, wrote in an opinion piece for Al Jazeera in June.

Ghani said his government is already undertakin­g some “fundamenta­l measures” to reduce corruption, noting that 28 contractin­g projects have recently been rejected for failing to comply with Afghanista­n’s public procuremen­t law. The law, which went into effect in 2008, dictates how contracts are approved and public funds are disbursed.

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