|
Weekly Press Review ? July 29 ? 4 August
Headlines
Ariana set to
airlift fruit exports to Saudi Arabia
ADB pledges
$50m for Afghan power distribution system
Call for rethink in aid policy
Globecomm Awarded Contract
in Afghanistan
ADB to fork over
$25m for irrigation system repair
Integrated strategy
key to Afghan development
Investors want
downward revision of income tax rate
Baghran valley
improvements top $1.5 million
Pak levy
on flour exports to Afghanistan may be abolished
Battery-manufacturing factory closed down in Herat
Security, drug, funding woes hinder US rebuilding in Afghanistan
Removal of
15% tax on wheat export to Afghanistan sought
IFC trains women
entrepreneurs in Afghanistan
Food prices soar in Afghanistan
Press
Clippings
Ariana set to
airlift fruit exports to Saudi Arabia
By: Zainab Mohammadi
KABUL, August 3
(Pajhwok Afghan News)
Afghanistan's national
flag-carrier Ariana Airlines will start airlifting fresh-fruit exports to Saudi
Arabia from Thursday. Afghanistan International Chamber of Commerce head
Hamidullah Qaderi told Pajhwok Afghan News on Wednesday 5,000 tons of apricots
would be dispatched to Jeddah.
An accord on airlifting the
fruits to Saudi Arabia was signed here on Wednesday between the Ariana Airline
and the Afghanistan International Chambers of Commerce.Land-route exports
involved several problems like transit and sea-port delays and non-cooperative
attitude of neighboring countries, said Qaderi, who was confident the agreement
with Ariana would help overcome those hardships.
Ariana Airline chief Nadir
Aatish told this scribe: "It's just the beginning of the exports, which may be
increased if the results are found gainful." Under the deal, the airline will
initially charge the exporters 10 Afghanis (20 cents) per kilogram, a rate that
could be revised later on.
Ghaffar Daudi, owner of the
Daudi Company which exports fruits to the kingdom, pinned high hopes on the new
arrangement of fruit shipments. With time, he believed, the fruits could be
exported in a similar way to Asian countries, Europe and the United States.
Commerce Ministry official
Sayed Hashim Saadat revealed more than 70,000 tons of fresh fruits and more than
80,000 tons of dry fruits had been exported last year by the landlocked country.
Back to top
ADB pledges
$50m for Afghan power distribution system
By: Zainab Mohammadi
KABUL, August 2
(Pajhwok Afghan News)
The Asian Development Bank and
the Afghan government Tuesday signed a $50 million agreement on developing an
efficient power distribution system in Afghanistan.
The government will use the
fund, half debt and half donation, to create a large network for countrywide
power supply. The present decrepit power supply system, benefiting only a small
portion of the Afghan population, leaves a lot to be desired.
Finance Minister Anwar ul Haq
Ahady said at the agreement-signing ceremony: "So far, power supply is confined
to major cities? but this is just the beginning of a long-term project, which
aims to illuminate all villages across Afghanistan."
The war-crippled country is
currently reliant on emergency electricity supply from Tajikistan and Uzbekistan
at a rate of two cents per kilowatt. Ahady promised the electricity purchased
the two Central Asian countries would be supplied to Pul-i-Khumri in the north,
Jalalabad in the east and Gardez in the south.
A new power distribution
network would be set up in Sar-i-Pul province, north of Kabul. Cities like
Taloqan, Khanabad, Imam Sahib, Breshnakot, Sarobi, Mehtarlam, Qarghayi, Mohammad
Agha and Pul Alam will benefit form the project.
He told the ceremony the $26.5
million long-term loan would be repaid to ADB over a period of 40 years while
the rest of the amount was aid to help Afghanistan reinvigorate its power
infrastructure.Minister of Energy and Water Mohammad Ismail Khan said completion
of the project would take about four years and work on it would be launched in a
couple of months.
He added temporary power
imports from the neighboring countries were required at the moment, as the
repair of dams and power plants was a time-consuming and capital-intensive task.
Back to top
Call for rethink in aid policy
1 Aug 05
By Kevin Anderson
BBC News website
Bob Geldof has challenged the
world to make poverty history, but some four billion people in the world still
live on less than $1 a day. The organizers behind Live 8 called for the
cancellation of debt, more targeted aid and the removal of trade barriers that
limit African economies.
But leading minds in
development at the interdisciplinary TED (Technology, Entertainment and Design)
conference in Oxford have called for a radical rethink of development.
They argue that aid as it
exists now actually retards broad-based development. It is not that money is not
wanted. Ashraf Ghani served as Afghanistan's finance minister and helped secure
$27.5B in aid for his country.
But he argues that $1 in aid
rarely means that $1 delivered to the people who need it the most.
The flaws of aid:
Mr. Ghani and Clare Lockhart
with the Overseas Development Institute in London are currently writing a book
looking at how to foster development in failed and fragile states like
Afghanistan.
Failed states are a problem.
They cannot provide the environment to help their population climb out of
poverty. And as been seen in recent years, failed states breed instability and
insecurity.
But the current system of aid
does not work and isn't helping these states and their people. They argue that
time lines for aid projects are too short to accomplish much. Most aid programs
are tied to the annual budget cycles of donor countries, but to be effective,
they argue programs need to be designed with time frames of five years or more.
The programs would have an end
point in sight, but the aid should be focused on creating functioning, capable
states. Once that is accomplished, the states would be self-sufficient and aid
no longer necessary.
And technical assistance -
sending western experts to developing countries - has not proved a panacea in
creating stable states that provide for their people. Mr. Ghani advocates
intellectual exchanges between fledgling states and developed countries and also
a program of distance education where students could remain in their home
countries and still benefit from education at universities abroad.
This major investment in the
human capital of these countries would ensure a new generation of capable
leaders and managers, Mr. Ghani said.
Wasted aid
Aid can also distort local
economies, Ms Lockhart says, pointing to countries where aid agencies pay
doctors more to drive trucks than they can make practicing medicine. And even
when aid reaches these countries, bureaucratic costs limit its impact and
effectiveness.
Ms Lockhart points to a project
meant to deliver roofing timbers to the central highlands of Afghanistan.
Villagers described how the agency in Geneva meant to oversee the project took
20% of the $30m for administrative costs, which subcontracted to an
non-governmental organization (NGO) in Washington that took another 20%, which
in turn subcontracted to an Afghan NGO that took another 20%. And then they paid
money to a trucking company in Iran to haul the timber.
Once the timber arrived, it was
found to be of no use as roofing timber to the villagers. It was too heavy for
the mud brick walls of their homes so the villagers chopped the wood up and used
it as firewood.
They have argued that a better
model is to deliver block grants to villagers who receive the money only if they
hold local elections and post how the money will be used in a public place in
the village.
Mr. Ghani definitely follows
the old charge of comforting the afflicted and afflicting the comfortable. When
asked by conference organizer Chris Anderson what scared him most when
considering the future of Afghanistan, he responded: "You," although it was
obvious he meant the comment much more broadly. But he said: "What scares me
most is your lack of engagement." However, Mr. Ghani clearly has a different
kind of engagement in mind than the system of aid that has existed for the last
60 years.
Back to top
Globecomm Awarded Contract
in Afghanistan
Arab News
2 Aug 05
Globecomm Systems, a global
provider of satellite-based communications solutions, announced that the
company?s subsidiary, Globecomm Network Services Corporation (GNSC), has been
awarded a one-year service contract extension from the Afghan Ministry of
Communications (MOC) to provide teleport services to carry Internet and Voice
Over Internet Protocol traffic (VoIP). GNSC will utilize a partnering teleport
in Hong Kong and GNSC?s global voice solution to service the MOC.
Back to top
ADB to fork over
$25m for irrigation system repair
By: Ahmad Naeem Qaderi
MAZAR-I-SHARIF, August 1
(Pajhwok Afghan News): The Asian Development Bank has agreed to fork over $25
millions for the repair of water reservoirs and small dams to help revive the
decrepit irrigation system in the northern Balkh province.
Engineer Esmatullah Esmat, head
of the Balkh irrigation department, told Pajhwok Afghan News on Monday the ADB
had already launched a survey of small dams and irrigation channels, extensively
damaged by decades of war.
"The survey of the flawed
irrigation network is on the verge of completion. The system's repair will take
a year," said Esmat, who hoped the project would yield optimum results in terms
of enhanced agricultural produce and farmer income.
Irrigation and water supply
arrangements across the country suffered serious damage during the past one and
a half decade of conflict. Though watercourses have been reconstructed in some
parts of the country, yet they have failed to benefit the growers because of
tectonic faults.
Esmat reckoned in Balkh there
were 18 water reservoirs and around 400 channels that needed repairs. Some of
them have been built in a technically wrong way and others remain damaged.
Welcoming the survey and
governmental plans to renovate watercourses, farmer Abdul Ghafoor from Nahr
Shahi district said: "We are currently reliant on reservoir water for
irrigation. The raw-mud facility is crumbling and its water level going down."
Back to top
Integrated strategy key
to Afghan development
The Daily Yomiuri (Japan)
31 July 2005
Afghanistan has reached a
critical turning point. Since the Bonn Accord of late 2001 and presidential
elections in October last year, the country has taken major steps on the road to
political stabilization.
But without robust economic
development to provide the jobs and opportunities needed to counter extremist
recruitment and a burgeoning narcotics trade, the country faces the real danger
that democracy and a free market economy will fail to take root.
Afghanistan's strategy for
attracting aid to fuel economic revival has been broadly successful. And in
April the Afghan Development Forum held in Kabul pin-pointed the development of
infrastructure, energy and human resources as key priorities.
However, the vital missing
ingredient is a development dialogue between the international community--donor
countries and development agencies--and Afghanistan's own planners aimed at
drawing up an integrated national plan framed around the country's position in
the wider region.
Afghanistan's comparative
advantage is its position as a land link in the flow of goods and services
between Central Asia and the Sub continental. To realize this potential, our
highways and power lines need to be geared to growing regional trade flows and,
in particular, to the needs of energy-thirsty South Asian economies.
The construction of the
projected Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan natural gas pipeline, for example,
will serve to mitigate India and Pakistan's pressing energy shortages.
Similarly, a major upgrade of the road network connecting Afghanistan to its
neighbors could see Central Asia became less than 32 hours drive from the sea.
Much needs to be done to
strengthen Afghanistan's fledgling judiciary and draw up new legislation. At one
level this will assist the standardization of trade regimes and reduction of
trade barriers to accelerate the process of regional economic integration. At
another level, new investment laws will be essential to encourage foreign
participation in developing Afghanistan's resources. The copper mines at Ainak
in southeastern Logar Province are a case in point: Delays in excavating
reserves worth an estimated 12 billion dollars are largely the result of a lack
of appropriate mining laws.
Poverty reduction and providing
alternative livelihoods to counter booming narcotics production must remain
central to the country's development strategy, however. Rather than relying on a
suppression-centered approach that risks replicating Colombia's daunting
security problems, we should be looking to the lessons afforded by Thailand's
successful crop substitution program within the context of our own integrated
development strategy.
Anti-opium wars in the absence
of such a plan would serve only to entrench regional warlords, recruit new
Taliban fighters and compel cash-strapped farmers to cooperate with already
powerful narco-mafias.
Finally, capacity development,
particularly developing human resources and technical assistance, will be key to
accelerating economic and social progress. Efficient revenue-generating
measures--badly needed to maintain and improve public services--also will be
needed to underpin sustainable development.
In short, to assist Afghanistan
to realize its considerable potential as a land bridge, the donor community and
Afghan planners need in the coming months to meet and agree on an integrated
strategy that recognizes and builds on the country's position in a wider region.
The role of landlocked Laos developing as a land-bridge within the Greater
Mekong Sub region offers an interesting model.
The failure to draw up such a
common approach risks a descent into uncoordinated, piecemeal development that
ultimately will not provide the growth needed to sustain Afghanistan's still
precarious political advances. That would be a tragedy not just for the
long-suffering Afghan people, but also for their neighbors.
Back to top
Investors want
downward revision of income tax rate
By: Mustafa Basharat
KABUL, July 31
(Pajhwok Afghan News)
The 20 per cent tax levied on
registered companies will prove a crushing blow for the country's nascent
economy ravaged by decades of conflict and will halt its march towards the goal
of self-sufficiency.
This was the crux of speeches
delivered at a round-table conference held at the German embassy here. Members
of the business community, top-level officials, economists and cabinet ministers
attended the event.
While representatives of the
private sector pour their grievances vis-?vis the tax levies, government
officials were quick to assure them of remedy provided the former come out with
logical arguments regarding decrease in the tax ratio.The day-long debate on
"economics, education and politics" revolved around the tax ratio, insecurity
and role of private sectors in provision of job to new university graduates.
As per the new law, registered
companies will pay 20 per cent tax on their net profit while those unregistered
will be liable to pay 2 per cent tax on their total investment as well as net
profit.
The investors went on
complaining that the government had not taken them into confidence ahead of
enacting the law. "They should have discussed the issue with us instead taking
the unilateral decision," they argued.
Director of the Roshan Mobile
Company Khwaja Karim said they had invested the biggest amount in the country's
communication sector but the officials did not even contact them before
introducing the new measures.
Calling the imposition of 20
per cent tax a disastrous move, director of the Afghanistan International
Champers of Commerce (AICC) Hamid Qadri vowed the traders would resist the law
with full might. "The government should support the industrial sector to groom
instead of slapping huge levies," he pointed out.
Speaking on the occasion,
Finance Minister Anwarul Haq Ahadi assured the investors and industrialists the
government would give due consideration to their demands if found viable. He
said they wanted the country to achieve rapid progress on the economic front and
were ready to provide all possible help on this count.
Urging the business community
to cooperate with the government in rebuilding the country's tattered economy,
the minister said the goal of Afghanistan's self-sufficiency mostly depended on
tax reforms.
The conference was organized by
the German embassy in Kabul with the aim to establish close links between
economic, education and political circles. Besides the tax issue, which
overlapped the debate, the participants also dilated on matters like insecurity,
role of private sector in job creation and education.
Back to top
Baghran valley
improvements top $1.5 million
July 31, 2005
COMBINED FORCES COMMAND ?
AFGHANISTAN
COALITION PRESS INFORMATION
CENTER
BAGRAM AIRFIELD, Afghanistan ?
More then $1.5 million is being spent on civic improvements in the Baghran
valley of southern Afghanistan in an effort to show the benefits of peace and
improve educational opportunities for the people there.
The projects range in scope and
size from an $80,000 renovation of a health care clinic to the construction of
two police stations costing $300,000. The improvements will raise the quality of
life and improve the government of Afghanistan?s ability to maintain law and
order.
More than $300,000 will be
spent for the construction of two police stations and a district police
headquarters that will house district leaders and provide a base of operations
for local police forces. Four police vehicles and 10 motorcycles are being
provided to law enforcement officials in the area. The cost of these
transportation assets is more than $125,000.
Four schools are being
renovated, each at a cost of nearly $200,000, at various locations throughout
the area so men, women and children will be able to have a comfortable place
that fosters learning. Road construction, repair and maintenance equipment, at a
cost of more than $250,000, has been purchased both to help encourage commerce
and to improve the reaction time of local law enforcement agencies.
?These projects all show a
reaching out by the Afghan government to the people of this area,? said U.S.
Army Lt. Col. Andy Mazerik, a civil affairs specialist working in the area. ?New
equipment for police stations allows the officers in that area to better respond
to threats and the improvements to roads will help increase security and trade.?
Back to top
Pak levy on
flour exports to Afghanistan may be abolished
By: Pakhtun Sahar
ISLAMABAD, July 30
(Pajhwok Afghan News)
Pakistan is mulling the
abolition of an existing 15 percent duty on flour supplies to Afghanistan in
order to control market swings in the neighboring country.Dr. Salman Shah,
advisor to the prime minister on economic affairs, said on Saturday the flour
market across the border had gone sluggish despite the fact that Pakistan
remained the biggest exporter of the commodity to Afghanistan.
"Our government will taken
effective measures to bring back buoyancy to the once bustling market for its
flour in Afghanistan," promised Dr. Salman, who hinted at either scrapping the
15 percent duty or drastically reducing it.
"If the percent octroi is a
hurdle to the flour bazaar stability, we will certainly do a rethink on it," the
prime ministerial advisor told Pajhwok Afghan News in an exclusive chat.
Meanwhile, a flour mills'
association leader linked the weakening Pakistani foothold in the Afghan market
to the 15 percent levy on flour exports. He called upon the government to
realize the gravity of the situation and take steps to bolster Pakistan's
declining position, which had been strong enough for more than half a century.
Abdul Ali argued Pakistan
earned a lot from flour exports to Afghanistan but the tax ever-since its
imposition had been taking a heavy toll on these profits. "One day, we will lose
the market if the levy is not withdrawn," he warned.
He also demanded strict checks
on smuggling of the staple food item to Afghanistan to save genuine millers from
losses. Illegal supplies were a big factor discouraging authorized exporters, he
concluded.
Back to top
Battery-manufacturing factory closed down in Herat
By: Ahmad Qureshi
KABUL, July 30
(Pajhwok Afghan News
The first battery-manufacturing
factory of Afghanistan has been closed down after three years of operation -
thanks free imports of the product and a flawed power supply system.
Haji Abdul Hamid Zory, owner of
the Zory Battery Factory, Saturday recalled he had launched the venture in 2001
with a capital of two million dollars and technical support from Turkish
engineers. His factory was making auto batteries of 60, 75 and 150 volts.
He lamented the closure of his
project owing to low battery prices imported into Afghanistan without any tax
and an erratic power supply arrangement. The anguished owner alleged two foreign
firms gave a 20 percent discount for three years on their products sold in
Afghanistan.
"But now that they have
captured the local market, the firms have jacked up the prices of their
batteries," he continued. Heavy-vehicle batteries of the two companies were
priced at 900 Afghanis apiece as long as the Zory Factory remained operational.
Now the rate has surged to 1400 Afghanis.
Abdul Azim Rahimi, customs
office chief in Herat, contended companies could increase or decrease their
prices to compete with rivals in the free market system. He pointed out the
Finance Ministry was authorized to ban or allow the import of foreign batteries.
At least 50 workers were
employed by the Zory Factory, which was spread over 30,000 square meters of land
and situated just two kilometers north of the city on the Herat-Torghonday
Highway.
Haji Jan Mohammad, a resident
of Kandahar, said he had bought a Zory battery for his truck a year ago and it
was a domestic product of good quality. "We should always purchase our domestic
products to encourage local industry," he stressed.
The distraught factory owner
said he had exported 4,000 batteries to Iran and Turkmenistan during the first
year of his company's operation. He claimed his factory had the capability of
manufacturing 200-volt batteries, something out of the ordinary in Central Asian
countries.
"With 350,000 batteries finding
their way to Afghanistan annually, the government will be well-advised in
controlling imports. Such a step will help promote our own products. And an
outright import ban will save Afghanistan seven million dollars a year," Hamid
Zory reckoned.
Back to top
Security, drug, funding woes hinder US rebuilding in Afghanistan
Thu Jul 28, 9:28 PM ET
WASHINGTON (AFP)
Poor security, increased opium
production and delayed funding are hindering US reconstruction efforts in
Afghanistan, an independent probe showed, criticizing the absence of a
performance management plan for American aid projects.
"Deteriorating security
rendered large areas inaccessible to the assistance community, and the continued
rise in opium production undermined legitimate economic activity, said a report
by the US Government Accountability Office, the investigative arm of Congress.
In said that last year, most
assistance funds were not available until nearly six months into the year,
preventing the United States Agency for International Development, the federal
aid agency, from accelerating reconstruction efforts in the war-ravaged nation.
The United States is the
largest donor in Afghanistan, contributing about 38 percent of the 3.6 billion
dollars pledged by the international community following the ouster of the
hard-line Islamic regime in a US-led invasion in late 2001.
Taliban loyalists have stepped
up attacks ahead of parliamentary elections scheduled for September 18.
Political violence has killed more than 770 people since the start of the year,
mostly militants, compared to 850 in all of 2004.
An 18,000-strong US-led
coalition force remains in Afghanistan to hunt down Taliban fighters, mainly in
the south and southeast of the country.
US Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice, swearing in the new ambassador to Kabul on Wednesday, said
that the US led coalition had transformed Afghanistan to a "place of hope and
promise" from once the center point of the "arc of crisis" in South Asia.
Ronald Neumann, the new envoy,
said Taliban forces were resorting to desperate attacks on soft targets but
"they will not be allowed to undermine the continued rule of President Hamid
Karzai's government or Afghanistan's progress toward a better future." The GAO
report said Thursday that the United States did not meet all of its
reconstruction targets in Afghanistan due to security and other obstacles.
For example, it said, USAID
intended to rehabilitate or build 286 schools by the end of 2004 but due to
"poor contractor performance and security problems," by September, it had
completed only eight.
Despite its considerable
investment in Afghanistan?s reconstruction, the report said USAID struggled with
contract management and project oversight. In addition, USAID has not developed
a performance management plan to monitor projects, nor has it focused
contractors' efforts on developing project-specific performance plans," it said.
USAID, the report said, "lacked a comprehensive strategy to direct its efforts.
Moreover, it said, measures
provided by the US embassy in Kabul to decision-makers in Washington "did not
comprehensively portray progress in each sector or the overall US program."
Although a long-term, country-level strategy was approved as of July 2005, USAID
operated throughout 2004 without a comprehensive strategy, it said.
The USAID said it concurred
with the reports recommendations and indicated that it had made progress in
improving its strategic planning and performance measurement processes.
The USAID has completed its
first long-term country-level strategy for Afghanistan covering 2005-2010
period, the agency said while indicating that it has begun developing a
performance management plan.
Back to top
Removal of
15% tax on wheat export to Afghanistan sought
Daily Times (Pakistan) / July
29, 2005
ISLAMABAD: The Flourmills
Association on Thursday raised concern on the 15 percent levy on export of wheat
products to Afghanistan, and demanded its removal.
The demand came during a
meeting of a twenty-member delegation led by Abdul Ali Kakar, Chairman Pakistan
Flour Mills Association, with Dr Salman Shah, Adviser to the Prime Minister on
Finance, Revenue, Economic Affairs and Statistics in the Ministry of Finance, on
Thursday.
The issue of the rising price
of atta was discussed in the meeting. The association raised various issues
during the meeting including levy of 15% tax on export of wheat products to
Afghanistan, quarantine inspection/testing of imported wheat in Pakistan despite
pre-shipment inspection at the country of origin and supply to the flour mills
in all the provinces at a uniform rate and without any subsidy element.
Mr. Asad Elahi, Secretary
Statistics Division, also attended the meeting, says a press release.
Welcoming the delegation to the
Ministry of Finance, Dr Salman Shah said that in order to bring down the price
of atta and have a smooth supply to the markets in both Pakistan and
Afghanistan, the government was determined to take all the necessary steps to
liberalize the import of wheat and atta by the private sector including
flourmills.
He said the government believed
that the market mechanism and the concept of uninterrupted supply from the
cheapest sources could ensure sustained supply of atta at affordable prices to
the people.
?We have introduced a liberal
import regime and now wheat and atta can be imported by the private sectors
including flour -mills from anywhere. The government will however maintain the
strategic reserves of wheat,? he said.
The association expressed
gratitude for the measures introduced by the government for liberal import of
wheat and wheat flour by the private sector and assured that they would run
their flourmills with full capacity to provide relief to the people and bring
down the price of atta.
The association leaders said
the atta price had started decreasing due to the news of the arrival of Russian
wheat in Pakistan and the consistency in the policy of liberal import of wheat
and flour would lead to full utilization of the capacity of the flour mils to
reduce costs, bringing down the atta price in the coming days.
Back to
top
IFC trains women
entrepreneurs in Afghanistan
Uz Report.com (Uzbekistan)
30 July 2005
The International Finance
Corporation, the private sector arm of the World Bank Group, recently organized
a two-day workshop on ?How to Market your Business? for 40 women entrepreneurs
in Kabul. The event, which was held 26-27 July, is part of a larger IFC regional
program to strengthen women-owned small and medium enterprises.
The workshop was designed for
women who have some experience in formal small and medium-sized businesses and
who seek innovative, non-traditional and growth-oriented approaches to their
enterprises. It was delivered using IFC?s Business Edge management training
methodology and expertise. The training series aims to increase productivity,
profitability, and growth in small businesses by improving their financial,
operational, and marketing management. It also focuses on the soft skills needed
for effective human resource management and sound leadership. In particular, the
Kabul workshop focused on the introduction to marketing concepts, the targeting
of markets, and pricing.
IFC workshops intend to provide
women with the skills and the support they need to emerge and to compete in the
mainstream business world. Despite the challenges arising from the post-conflict
environment of Afghanistan, IFC believes that unleashing the potential of
entrepreneurship is crucial to enabling women to transform their socioeconomic
status, bolster private sector development, and ultimately contribute to the
country?s reconstruction and economic advancement. ?Afghanistan needs all its
citizens, male and female, to participate in the economic growth of the country.
Workshops like these that equip women with business skills are contributed to
this". These were Mr. Hamid Qaderi?s (CEO of Afghanistan International Chamber
of Commerce (AICC)) remarks at the end of the workshop when thanked for hosting
it.
IFC?s technical assistance
facility, the Private Enterprise Partnership for the Middle East and North
Africa, has been drawing from its regional experience and country mapping
surveys to identify market barriers facing women, including access to markets,
finance, business resources, and associations. IFC research shows that market
failures discriminate more against women than men and that some of these
imbalances can be addressed by technical assistance interventions targeted at
growth-oriented enterprises.
Back to top
Food prices soar in Afghanistan
BBC Monitoring
Pajhwok news agency
29 July 2005
Prices of some daily
commodities registered upward trend despite increase in the value afghani
[Afghan currency] while gold prices considerably came down over the week in the
local market.
Purchase rate of a US dollar
that stood at 49.80 at the start, declined to 49.75 Afghanis at the weekend.
Exchange rate of afghani ended up at 818 against 1,000 [Pakistani] rupees.
Earlier it was 820 Afghanis per 1,000 rupees.
According to local jewelers,
gold prices declined in the market over the week. A goldsmith, Bhai Wardak, in
the Kabul Metropol Market, said price of one gram of Arabic gold had reduced
from 650 to 640, while that of Iranian gold from 550 to 540 Afghanis.
However, local merchants say
prices of daily commodities and food items, like rice, tea etc., have shoot up
due to the higher rates of transportation and decrease in the value of Pakistani
currency vis-?vis Afghanis.
A 50-kg bag of rice that valued
1,600 Afghanis at the start of the week now sold for 1,650 Afghanis. Price of
green tea also shoots up by 10 Afghanis per kilogram over the week.
However, prices of other
commodities, like flour, sugar and cooking oil, remained stable. Prices of a
50-kg flour and sugar bags remained at 1,480 and 1,250 respectively while five
kilogram cooking oil was sold for 180 and one kilogram black tea for 140
Afghanis.
The prices of Liquefied
Petroleum Gas (LPG) and diesel also remained unchanged standing at 32 Afghanis
per kg and 25 Afghanis per liter respectively.
Back to top
|