Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:570Hits:19913712Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID128403
Title ProperFixing US foreign assistance
Other Title Informationcheaper, smarter, stronger
LanguageENG
AuthorLockhart, Clare
Publication2014.
Summary / Abstract (Note)In 2002, during the early stages of Afghanistan's reconstruction process, I sat in a remote part of Bamiyan Province with a group of villagers who told me how excited they had been several months before, when a $150 million housing program from a UN agency had been announced on the radio. They felt the program, which promised to bring shelter to their communities, would transform their lives. They were shocked, however, to discover soon after that this program had already come and gone-with very little change to their lives. Indignant, as well as curious, they decided to track the money and find out what had happened to the program that, as far as they were concerned, had never been. Becoming forensic accountants, they went over the files and figures and found that the original amount granted by the UN had first gone through an aid agency in Geneva that took twenty percent off the top before sub-contracting to a Washington-based agency that took another twenty percent. The funds were passed like a parcel from agency to agency, NGO to NGO, until they limped to their final destination-Afghanistan itself. The few remaining funds went to buy wood from Iran, shipped via a trucking cartel at above-market rates. Eventually some wooden beams did reach the village, but they were too heavy for the mud walls used in construction there. All the villagers said they could do was cut up the wood for firewood, sending $150 million literally up in smoke
`In' analytical NoteWorld Affairs US Vol.176, No.5; Jan-Feb 2014: p.84-93
Journal SourceWorld Affairs US Vol.176, No.5; Jan-Feb 2014: p.84-93
Key WordsNorth America ;  United States - US ;  Afghanistan ;  Foreign Policy - US ;  US Foreign Assistance ;  Commentators Claims ;  Foreign Development ;  UN Agencies ;  NGOs ;  Drug Trafficking ;  Drug Literally