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THE STANS
Donors gather for Tokyo meet on Afghanistan
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) July 8, 2012


Japan will play host Sunday to a world conference aimed at charting a course to stabilise poor and war-torn Afghanistan in the decade after foreign combat forces leave.

Representatives from dozens of countries will gather in Tokyo where they are expected to pledge cash and support for the post-NATO era in a country that has known little but war for thirty years.

Afghan President Hamid Karzai, who will be in Tokyo along with US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and United Nations chief Ban Ki-moon, has called for $4 billion a year in civilian aid.

Without a functioning economy, Kabul covers only a third of the $6 billion it spends each year, not counting security costs, and has for a long time been heavily dependent on aid.

Those inside and outside the country fear that once the US and its allies no longer have to worry about their soldiers dying in Afghanistan after the 2014 pullout, the country could be left to drift into the hands of drug lords and extremists.

Figures from more than 80 nations and international organisations gathering in the Japanese capital are expected to adopt the "Tokyo Declaration", pledging support and cash for Kabul.

As part of the so-called "Transformation Decade" from 2015, participants will issue a framework document stressing the principle of "mutual accountability", offering aid on the condition that Kabul clamps down on endemic corruption.

According to the World Bank, spending on defence and development by foreign donors accounted for more than 95 percent of GDP in 2010-11.

In May an Afghanistan security conference in Chicago involving the countries of the NATO-led coalition adopted a plan to provide $4.1 billion in annual security aid in coming years.

The focus in Tokyo will be on development.

In an interview with the Asahi Shimbun newspaper published Friday, conference co-chairman Japanese Foreign Minister Koichiro Gemba said he was hoping it would result in pledges worth at least $3.0 billion a year.

But he warned the money would come with strings.

"(Kabul) must improve its governance capacity, including eradicating corruption," he said, adding a mechanism to review progress in these areas every two years had to be developed.

On Saturday Gemba said donors will stump up more than $16 billion for four years to 2015, adding Japan would provide up to $3 billion over five years, in addition to $1 billion for Afghanistan's neighbours.

"This scale of pledge will satisfy the fiscal gap that the World Bank and the Afghan government have said would be needed for the development of the country," Gemba said.

His announcement came hours after Clinton said the United States had designated Afghanistan a major non-NATO ally, giving it special privileges.

Clinton announced the move, which provides a long-term framework for security and defence cooperation, during a brief visit to Kabul where she had a breakfast meeting with Karzai.

"We see this as a powerful symbol of our commitment to Afghanistan's future," she said at a news conference after talks in Kabul with Karzai.

Tens of billions of dollars have poured into Afghanistan since the US-led invasion that toppled the Taliban in late 2001, but graft is rife from local police to high officials, and patience among donor countries is wearing thin.

Ministers from Britain, France, Germany and Australia, as well as India, Pakistan and Iran, will be present in Tokyo on Sunday, alongside envoys from countries including Russia, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, China and South Korea.

The conference is scheduled to begin at 0000 GMT.

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US designates Afghanistan as major ally: Clinton
Kabul (AFP) July 7, 2012 - The United States has designated Afghanistan a major non-NATO ally, giving the war-torn country special privileges as the US prepares to pull its troops out in 2014, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Saturday.

Clinton announced the move, which provides a long-term framework for security and defence cooperation, during a brief visit to Kabul where she had a breakfast meeting with President Hamid Karzai.

"We see this as a powerful symbol of our commitment to Afghanistan's future," Clinton said at a press conference after the talks.

"This is the kind of relationship that we think will be especially beneficial as we do the transition."

The new status, which comes into effect immediately, makes it easier for a country to purchase and finance its acquisition of US defence equipment, along with other benefits.

"The United States is not abandoning Afghanistan," Clinton said. "Quite the opposite: we are building a partnership with Afghanistan that will endure."

This is the first such designation by President Barack Obama's administration. Other countries with the designation include Pakistan, Israel, Egypt, Japan, Jordan Korea, Argentina, Australia and New Zealand.

Clinton said the security situation in Afghanistan "though far from ideal, is certainly more stable", while the capacity of the Afghan security forces had "significantly improved".

NATO leaders have endorsed plans to hand Afghan forces the lead for security across their country by mid-2013 while foreign troops will gradually switch their focus from combat to support mode.

NATO has a total of 130,000 soldiers helping the Karzai government fight an insurgency by hardline Taliban militants, and they are due to withdraw by the end of 2014 when the transition process is complete.

The US and Afghanistan have already signed a Strategic Partnership Agreement which includes commitments on promoting democracy, good governance, advancing long-term security with the provision of foreign funds for the Afghan forces.

Clinton's visit to Kabul was a three-and-a-half hour stopover on her way to a major conference in Tokyo in which Afghanistan is set to seek billions of dollars in civilian aid.

Karzai, who will be in Tokyo along with officials including Clinton and United Nations chief Ban Ki-moon, has called for some $4 billion a year in civilian aid for Afghanistan to be pledged during Sunday's conference.

But a principle of "mutual accountability" will be stressed at the 70-nation meeting, making continued payment of aid conditional on Kabul making progress, particularly on corruption and transparency.

"Whilst (the NATO summit in) Chicago sought to show the beginnings of the implementation into transition, the transformation decade, on the security side, the goal of Tokyo is to (do) that same piece on the economic side, the civilian side," a US official said.

He stressed the important role of the private sector and encouraging private sector investment.

"For true kind of economic stability which obviously goes hand in hand with political stability there's obviously a diminishing role for assistance over time if we can build up true economic investment," he said.

After more than 30 years of war, the Afghan economy is weak and the country cannot survive without foreign aid. According to the World Bank, spending on defence and development by donors accounted for more than 95 percent of GDP in 2010-11.

Without a functioning economy, Kabul covers only $2 billion of the $6 billion it spends each year not counting security costs, said a Western diplomat, with donor countries making up the difference.

That would add to the $4.1 billion promised annually at the Chicago conference in May for security costs.



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On the anniversary of major ethnic violence, the top communist official of China's ethnic Uighur region vowed to strike down terrorists and separatists with "iron fists." Zhang Chunxian, secretary of the Xinjiang committee of the Communist Party of China, said the situation in the northwest Xinjiang Uighur autonomous region is stable. But the area faces "severe challenges," Zhang ... read more


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