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Found this tidbit in an article about something entirely different.....
".... the Nato alliance is spending £30m (CDN $65.3M) a year to import bottled water for British, American, Canadian, Dutch and German troops battling the Taliban insurgency in Afghanistan when it would cost less than £500,000 (CDN $1.1M) a time to set up local bottling plants. According to the Afghan government, which is facing drought, crop failure and the need for international aid to feed more than three million of its citizens this winter, the expensive importation of drinking water is a symbol of the lack of international co-ordination in restoring the country's shattered economy. A government spokesman in Kabul told The Herald: "Local bottling plants would provide employment for Afghans, safe water for the Nato soldiers and be a building block for further infrastructure development. "It would also cost a fraction of the coalition's current expenditure." And the UK's Department for International Development (DfID) has spent only £2m of its £50m three-year budget to fund "hearts-and-minds" construction projects in Helmand province. Of the £6.5m set aside for "quick-fix" projects, only £600,000 has gone on immediate work. The UN's World Food Programme is meanwhile seeking £16m to buy emergency food supplies to ease the plight of Afghan farmers whose crops have failed this year as a result of the worst drought in four years."
If I believe MSM, and I know I believe the experience people posting here, one big obstacle is the fact that the Taliban are still working at keeping such stuff from happening. Anything else I'm missing on why development/reconstruction isn't happening quicker?
- edit 212259EST Nov 06 to fix link -
".... the Nato alliance is spending £30m (CDN $65.3M) a year to import bottled water for British, American, Canadian, Dutch and German troops battling the Taliban insurgency in Afghanistan when it would cost less than £500,000 (CDN $1.1M) a time to set up local bottling plants. According to the Afghan government, which is facing drought, crop failure and the need for international aid to feed more than three million of its citizens this winter, the expensive importation of drinking water is a symbol of the lack of international co-ordination in restoring the country's shattered economy. A government spokesman in Kabul told The Herald: "Local bottling plants would provide employment for Afghans, safe water for the Nato soldiers and be a building block for further infrastructure development. "It would also cost a fraction of the coalition's current expenditure." And the UK's Department for International Development (DfID) has spent only £2m of its £50m three-year budget to fund "hearts-and-minds" construction projects in Helmand province. Of the £6.5m set aside for "quick-fix" projects, only £600,000 has gone on immediate work. The UN's World Food Programme is meanwhile seeking £16m to buy emergency food supplies to ease the plight of Afghan farmers whose crops have failed this year as a result of the worst drought in four years."
If I believe MSM, and I know I believe the experience people posting here, one big obstacle is the fact that the Taliban are still working at keeping such stuff from happening. Anything else I'm missing on why development/reconstruction isn't happening quicker?
- edit 212259EST Nov 06 to fix link -
