Too much money meant for Afghanistan aid is wasted, with a vast amount spent on foreign workers' high salaries, security and living arrangements, according to a report from humanitarian groups published Tuesday.
The prospects for peace in Afghanistan are being undermined because Western countries are failing to deliver on aid promises — and because much of the aid money they do send is going to expatriate workers, according to the Agency Coordinating Body for Afghan Relief, an alliance of 94 international aid agencies.
Since 2001, the international community has pledged $25 billion in help but has delivered only $15 billion, the alliance said. Of that $15 billion, some 40 percent of it — or $6 billion — goes back to donor countries in corporate profits and consultant salaries, the report found.
"A vast amount of aid is absorbed by high salaries, living, security, transport and accommodation costs for expatriates working for consulting firms or contractors," the report said. The costs are increasing with a recent deterioration in security, it said.
The cost of a full-time expatriate consultant working in Afghanistan is around $250,000, according to the group.
This is some 200 times the average annual salary of an Afghan civil servant, who is paid less than $1,000" per year, the report said.
|
|
|||||||||
|
Login
Search
This Month
Month Archive
who employs me
|
Where Afghan aid money goes
Comments
No comments found.
Trackbacks
TrackBack URL: |
email this blog
Don't have a reader account, but still want to commend/castigate? Send an email.
recent articles
tweet o' the moment
News sites i can't live without
The craft
Blogs i admit to viewing
blogs i don't admit to viewing
muzeek
|
|||||||