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-
- BACKGROUND NOTES: AFGHANISTAN
- PUBLISHED BY THE BUREAU OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS
- U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
-
- JULY 1994
-
- Official Name: Islamic State of Afghanistan
-
- PROFILE
-
- Geography
- Area: 648,000 sq. km. (252,000 sq. mi.); slightly
- smaller than Texas. Cities (1993 est.): Capital--Kabul
- (est. 800,000). Other cities--Kandahar (226,000); Herat
- (177,000); Mazar-e-Sharif (131,000); Jalalabad (58,000);
- Konduz (57,000).
-
- Terrain: Landlocked; mostly mountains and desert.
-
- Climate: Dry, with cold winters and hot summers.
-
-
- People
- Nationality: Noun and adjective--Afghan(s).
- Population: 17.7 million (1993 estimate, including about
- 1.4 million refugees in Pakistan and 2 million refugees
- in Iran). Annual growth rate: 2.5% (1993 est.).
-
- Ethnic groups: Pashtun, Tajik, Uzbek, Hazara, Aimaq,
- Turkmen, Baluch, Nuristani.
-
- Religions: Sunni Muslim 84%, Shi'a Muslim 15%.
-
- Languages: Pashto, Dari (Afghan Persian).
-
- Education: Years compulsory--6. Literacy--about 29%.
-
- Health: Infant mortality rate (1993)--169 /1,000. Life
- expectancy (1992 est.)--45 yrs. (male); 43 yrs. (female).
-
- Work force: Mostly in rural agriculture; number cannot
- be estimated due to conflict.
-
-
- Government
- Type: Afghanistan identifies itself as an "Islamic
- state."
-
- Independence: August 19, 1919 (from U.K.).
-
- Organization: Interim government is a presidential
- system with a prime minister and cabinet.
-
- Political parties: The 10 major Afghan political
- factions are largely based on the former resistance
- organizations. About half are Islamist in orientation;
- the other are more traditional or secular. President
- Burhanuddin Rabbani's Jamiat-i-Islami (Islamic Society)
- and Prime Minister Gulbuddin Hekmatyar's Hezb-i-Islami
- (Islamic Party) have been bitter rivals for political
- influence in Afghanistan.
-
- Flag: Adopted in 1992, the flag has three horizontal
- bands--green, white, and black--with the great seal of
- Afghanistan superimposed on the bands.
-
-
- Economy
- GDP: $3 billion (1991 est.).
-
- Natural resources: Natural gas, oil, coal, copper, talc,
- barites, sulfur, lead, zinc, iron, salt, precious and
- semiprecious stones.
-
- Agriculture (at least 65% of GDP): Wheat, corn, barley,
- rice, cotton, fruit, nuts, karakul pelts, wool, mutton.
-
- Industry (estimated 20% of GDP): Small-scale production
- for domestic use of textiles, soap, furniture, shoes,
- fertilizer, and cement; handwoven carpets for export.
-
- Trade (1992 est.): Exports--$1 billion: carpets, rugs,
- fruit and nuts, natural gas, cotton, oil-cake, karakul.
- Major markets--Central Asian Republics, EEC, India,
- Pakistan. Imports--$1.7 billion: petroleum products,
- sugar, manufactured goods, edible oils, tea. Major
- suppliers--Central Asian Republics, Japan, Singapore,
- France, India, Pakistan.
-
- 1994 market exchange rate: 2,400 Afghanis=U.S. $1.
-
-
- PEOPLE
- Afghanistan's ethnically and linguistically mixed
- population reflects its location astride historic trade
- and invasion routes leading from Central Asia into South
- and Southwest Asia. Pashtuns are the dominant ethnic
- group, accounting for about 38% of the population. Tajik
- (25%), Hazara (19%), Aimaq (6%), Uzbek (6%), Turkmen
- (2%), and other small groups are also represented. Dari
- (Afghan Persian) and Pashto are official languages. Dari
- is spoken by more than one-third of the population as a
- first language and serves as a lingua franca for most
- Afghans. Tajik, Uzbek, and Turkmen are spoken widely in
- the north. More than 70 other languages and numerous
- dialects are also spoken by smaller groups throughout the
- country.
-
- Afghanistan is an Islamic country. An estimated 84% of
- the population is Sunni; the remainder is predominantly
- Shi'a, including Isma'ilis, Hazaras, and the Qizilbash.
- Despite attempts during the years of communist rule to
- secularize Afghan society, Islamic practices still
- pervade all aspects of life. Likewise, Islamic religious
- tradition and codes provide the principal means of
- controlling personal conduct and settling legal disputes.
- Excluding urban populations in the principal cities, most
- Afghans are divided into clans and tribal groups, which
- follow centuries-old customs and religious practices.
-
-
- HISTORY
- Afghanistan, often called the crossroads of Central Asia,
- has had a turbulent history. In 328 BC, Alexander the
- Great entered the territory of present-day Afghanistan,
- then part of the Persian Empire, to capture Bactria
- (present-day Balkh). Invasions by the Scythians, White
- Huns, and Turks followed in succeeding centuries. In AD
- 642, Arabs invaded the entire region and introduced
- Islam.
-
- Arab rule quickly gave way to the Persians, who
- controlled the area until conquered by the Turkic
- Ghaznavids in 998. Mahmud of Ghazni (998-1030)
- consolidated the conquests of his predecessors and turned
- Ghazni into a great cultural center as well as a base for
- frequent forays into India. Following Mahmud's short-
- lived dynasty, various princes attempted to rule sections
- of the country until the Mongol invasion of 1219. The
- Mongol invasion, led by Genghis Khan, resulted in the
- destruction of many cities, including Herat, Ghazni, and
- Balkh, and the despoliation of fertile agricultural
- areas.
-
- Following Genghis Khan's death in 1227, a succession of
- petty chieftains and princes struggled for supremacy
- until late in the 14th century, when one of his
- descendants, Tamerlane, incorporated Afghanistan into his
- own vast Asian empire. Babur, a descendant of Tamerlane
- and the founder of India's Moghul dynasty at the
- beginning of the 16th century, made Kabul the capital of
- an Afghan principality.
-
- In 1747, Ahmad Shah Durrani, the founder of what is known
- today as Afghanistan, established his rule. A Pashtun,
- Durrani was elected king by a tribal council after the
- assassination of the Persian ruler Nadir Shah at
- Khabushan in the same year. Throughout his reign,
- Durrani consolidated chieftainships, petty
- principalities, and fragmented provinces into one
- country. His rule extended from Mashhad in the west to
- Kashmir and Delhi in the east, and from the Amu Darya
- (Oxus) River in the north to the Arabian Sea in the
- south. All of Afghanistan's rulers until the 1978
- Marxist coup were from Durrani's Pashtun tribal
- confederation, and all were members of that tribe's
- Mohammadzai clan after 1818.
-
- European Influence
- Collision between the expanding British and Russian
- Empires significantly influenced Afghanistan during the
- 19th century. British concern over Russian advances in
- Central Asia and growing influence in Persia culminated
- in two Anglo-Afghan wars. The first (1839-42) resulted
- not only in the destruction of a British army, but is
- remembered today as an example of the ferocity of Afghan
- resistance to foreign rule. The second Anglo-Afghan war
- (1878-80) was sparked by Amir Shir Ali's refusal to
- accept a British mission in Kabul. This conflict brought
- Amir Abdur Rahman to the Afghan throne. During his reign
- (1880-1901), the British and Russians officially
- established the boundaries of what would become modern
- Afghanistan. The British retained effective control over
- Kabul's foreign affairs.
-
- Afghanistan remained neutral during World War I, despite
- German encouragement of anti-British feelings and Afghan
- rebellion along the borders of British India. The Afghan
- king's policy of neutrality was not universally popular
- within the country, however.
-
- Habibullah, Abdur Rahman's son and successor, was
- assassinated by members of an anti-British movement in
- 1919. His third son, Amanullah, regained control of
- Afghanistan's foreign policy after launching the Third
- Anglo-Afghan war with an attack on India in the same
- year. During the ensuing conflict, the war-weary British
- relinquished their control over Afghan foreign affairs by
- signing the Treaty of Rawalpindi in August 1919. In
- commemoration of this event, Afghans celebrate August 19
- as their Independence Day.
-
- Reform and Reaction
- King Amanullah (1919-29) moved to end his country's
- traditional isolation in the years following the Third
- Anglo-Afghan war. He established diplomatic relations
- with most major countries and, following a 1927 tour of
- Europe and Turkey--which had seen modernization and
- secularization under Attaturk--introduced several reforms
- intended to modernize the country. Some of these, such
- as the abolition of the traditional Muslim veil for women
- and the opening of a number of coeducational schools,
- quickly alienated many tribal and religious leaders. The
- weakness of the army under Amanullah further jeopardized
- his position. He was forced to abdicate in January 1929
- after Kabul fell to forces led by Bacha-i-Saqao, a Tajik
- brigand. Prince Nadir Khan, a cousin of Amanullah's, in
- turn defeated Bacha-i-Saqao in October of the same year.
- With considerable Pashtun tribal support, Khan was
- declared King Nadir Shah. Four years later, however, he
- was assassinated in a revenge killing by a Kabul student.
-
- Mohammad Zahir Shah, Nadir Khan's 19-year-old son,
- succeeded to the throne and reigned from 1933 to 1973.
- In 1964, King Zahir Shah promulgated a liberal
- constitution providing for a two-chamber legislature to
- which the king appointed one-third of the deputies. The
- people elected another third, and the remainder were
- selected indirectly by provincial assemblies. Although
- Zahir's "experiment in democracy" produced few lasting
- reforms, it permitted the growth of unofficial extremist
- parties of both left and right. This included the
- communist People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan
- (PDPA), which had close ideological ties to the Soviet
- Union. In 1967, the PDPA split into two major rival
- factions: the Khalq (Masses) faction headed by Nur
- Muhammad Taraki and supported by the military, and the
- Parcham (Banner) faction led by Babrak Karmal. The split
- reflected deep ethnic, class, and ideological divisions
- within Afghan society.
-
- Zahir's cousin, Sardar Mohammad Daoud, served as his
- Prime Minister from 1953 to 1963. During his tenure as
- Prime Minister, Daoud solicited military and economic
- assistance from both Washington and Moscow and introduced
- controversial social policies. Daoud's alleged support
- for the creation of a Pashtun state in the Pakistan-
- Afghan border area heightened tensions with Pakistan and
- eventually resulted in Daoud's dismissal in March 1963.
-
- Daoud's Republic (1973-78) and the April 1978 Coup
- Amid charges of corruption and malfeasance against the
- royal family and poor economic conditions caused by the
- severe 1971-72 drought, former Prime Minister Daoud
- seized power in a military coup on July 17, 1973. Daoud
- abolished the monarchy, abrogated the 1964 constitution,
- and declared Afghanistan a republic with himself as its
- first President and Prime Minister. His attempts to
- carry out badly needed economic and social reforms met
- with little success, and the new constitution promulgated
- in February 1977 failed to quell chronic political
- instability.
-
- Seeking to exploit more effectively mounting popular
- disaffection, the PDPA reunified with Moscow's support.
- On April 27-28, 1978, the PDPA initiated a bloody coup
- which resulted in the overthrow and death of Daoud and
- most of his family. Nur Muhammad Taraki, Secretary
- General of the PDPA, became President of the
- Revolutionary Council and Prime Minister of the newly
- established Democratic Republic of Afghanistan.
-
- Opposition to the Marxist government emerged almost
- immediately. During its first 18 months of rule, the
- PDPA brutally imposed a Marxist-style "reform" program
- which ran counter to deeply rooted Islamic traditions.
-
- Decrees advocating the abolition of usury, changes in
- marriage customs, and land reform were particularly
- misunderstood and upsetting to highly conservative
- villagers. In addition, thousands of members of the
- traditional elite, the religious establishment, and the
- intelligentsia were imprisoned, tortured, or murdered.
- Conflicts within the PDPA also surfaced early and
- resulted in exiles, purges, imprisonments, and
- executions.
-
- By the summer of 1978, a major revolt in the Nuristan
- region of eastern Afghanistan spread into a country-wide
- insurgency. In September 1979, Hafizullah Amin, who had
- earlier been the Prime Minister and minister of defense,
- seized power from Taraki after a palace shootout. Over
- the next two months, instability plagued Amin's regime as
- he moved against perceived enemies in the PDPA. By
- December, party morale was crumbling, and the insurgency
- was growing.
-
- The Soviet Invasion
- The Soviet Union moved quickly to take advantage of the
- April 1978 coup. In December 1978, Moscow signed a new
- bilateral treaty of friendship and cooperation with
- Afghanistan, and the Soviet military assistance program
- increased significantly. The regime's survival
- increasingly was dependent upon Soviet military equipment
- and advisers as the insurgency spread and the Afghan army
- began to collapse.
-
- By October 1979, however, relations between Afghanistan
- and the Soviet Union were tense as Hafizullah Amin
- refused to take Soviet advice on how to stabilize and
- consolidate his government. Faced with a deteriorating
- security situation on December 24, 1979, large numbers of
- Soviet airborne forces, joining thousands of Soviet
- troops already on the ground, began to land in Kabul
- under the pretext of a field exercise. On December 26,
- these invasion forces killed Hafizullah Amin and
- installed Babrak Karmal, exiled leader of the Parcham
- faction, as Prime Minister. Massive Soviet ground forces
- invaded from the north on December 27.
-
- Following the invasion, the Karmal regime, although
- backed by an expeditionary force of about 120,000 Soviet
- troops, was unable to establish authority outside Kabul.
- As much as 80% of the countryside, including parts of
- Herat and Kandahar, eluded effective government control.
- An overwhelming majority of Afghans opposed the communist
- regime, either actively or passively. Afghan freedom
- fighters (mujahidin) made it almost impossible for the
- regime to maintain a system of local government outside
- major urban centers. Poorly armed at first, in 1984 the
- mujahidin began receiving substantial assistance in the
- form of weapons and training from the U.S. and other
- outside powers.
-
- In May 1985, the seven principal Peshawar-based guerrilla
- organizations formed an alliance to coordinate their
- political and military operations against the Soviet
- occupation. Late in 1985, the mujahidin were active in
- and around Kabul, launching rocket attacks and
- assassinating high government officials. The failure of
- the Soviet Union to win over a significant number of
- Afghan collaborators or to rebuild a viable Afghan army
- forced it to bear an increasing responsibility for
- fighting the resistance and for civilian administration.
-
- Soviet and popular displeasure with the Karmal regime led
- to its demise in May 1986. Karmal was replaced by
- Muhammad Najibullah, former chief of the Afghan secret
- police (KHAD). Najibullah had established a reputation
- for brutal efficiency during his tenure as KHAD chief.
-
- As Prime Minister, though, Najibullah was ineffective and
- highly dependent on Soviet support. Undercut by deep-
- seated divisions within the PDPA, regime efforts to
- broaden its base of support proved futile.
-
- The Geneva Accords and Aftermath
- By the mid-1980s, the tenacious Afghan resistance
- movement--aided by the United States, Saudi Arabia,
- Pakistan, and others--was exacting a high price from the
- Soviets, both militarily within Afghanistan and by
- souring the U.S.S.R.'s relations with much of the Western
- and Islamic world. Although informal negotiations for a
- Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan had been underway
- since 1982, it was not until 1988 that the Governments of
- Pakistan and Afghanistan, with the United States and
- Soviet Union serving as guarantors, signed an agreement
- settling the major differences between them. The
- agreement, known as the Geneva accords, included five
- major documents, which, among other things, called for
- U.S. and Soviet non-interference in the internal affairs
- of Pakistan and Afghanistan, the right of refugees to
- return to Afghanistan without fear of persecution or
- harassment, and, most importantly, a timetable that
- ensured full Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan by
- February 15, 1989. About 14,500 Soviet and an estimated
- one million Afghan lives were lost between 1979 and the
- Soviet withdrawal in 1989.
-
- Significantly, the mujahidin were neither party to the
- negotiations nor to the 1988 agreement and, consequently,
- refused to accept the terms of the accords. As a result,
- civil war did not end with the Soviet withdrawal,
- completed as scheduled in February 1989. Instead, it
- escalated. Najibul-lah's regime, though failing to win
- popular support, territory, or international recognition,
- was able to remain in power until 1992.
-
-
- GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL CONDITIONS
- The Soviet-supported Najibullah regime did not collapse
- until the defection of General Abdul Rashid Dostam and
- his Uzbek militia in March 1992. However, as the
- victorious mujahidin entered Kabul to assume control over
- the city and the central government, a new round of
- internecine fighting began between the various militias,
- which had coexisted only uneasily during the Soviet
- occupation. With the demise of their common enemy, the
- militias' ethnic, clan, religious, and personality
- differences surfaced, and the civil war continued.
-
- Seeking to resolve these differences, the leaders of the
- Peshawar-based mujahidin groups agreed in mid-April to
- establish a 51-member interim Islamic Jihad Council to
- assume power in Kabul. Moderate leader Professor
- Sibghatullah Mojaddedi was to chair the council for three
- months, after which a 10-member leadership council
- composed of mujahidin leaders and presided over by the
- head of the Jamiat-i-Islami, Professor Burhanuddin
- Rabbani, was to be set up for a period of four months.
- During this six-month period, a Loya Jirga, or grand
- council of Afghan elders and notables, would convene and
- designate an interim administration which would hold
- power up to a year, pending elections.
-
- But in May 1992, Rabbani prematurely formed the
- leadership council, undermining Mojaddedi's fragile
- authority. In June, Mojaddedi surrendered power to the
- Leadership Council, which then elected Rabbani as
- President. Nonetheless, heavy fighting broke out in
- August 1992 in Kabul between forces loyal to President
- Rabbani and rival factions, particularly those who
- supported Gulbuddin Hekmatyar's Hezb-i-Islami. After
- Rabbani convened a highly controversial council to extend
- his tenure in December 1992, fighting in the capital
- flared up in January and February 1993. The Islamabad
- accord, signed in March 1993, which appointed Hekmatyar
- as Prime Minister, failed to have a lasting effect. A
- follow-up agreement, the Jalalabad accord, called for the
- militias to be disarmed but was never fully implemented.
- Through 1993, Hekmatyar's Hezb-i-Islami forces, allied
- with the Shi'a Hezb-i-Wahdat militia, clashed
- intermittently with Rabbani and Masood's Jamiat forces.
- Cooperating with Jamiat were militants of Sayyaf's
- Ittehad-i-Islami and, periodically, troops loyal to
- ethnic Uzbek strongman Abdul Rashid Dostam. On January
- 1, 1994, Dostam switched sides, precipitating large-scale
- fighting in Kabul and in northern provinces, which caused
- thousands of civilian casualties in Kabul and elsewhere
- and created a new wave of displaced persons and refugees.
-
- The central government exercises only limited control
- over the countryside, where local leaders and militia
- commanders, some with only nominal allegiance to any of
- the national figures battling for power in Kabul, hold
- sway. A date for elections in Afghanistan has yet to be
- established.
-
-
- Principal Government Officials
- President--Burhanuddin Rabbani
- Prime Minister--Gulbuddin Hekmatyar
- Minister of Finance--Abdul Karim Khalili
- Minister of Foreign Affairs--Hidayat Amin Arsala
- Charge d'Affaires to the U.S.--Abdul Rahim
-
- Afghanistan maintains an embassy in the United States at
- 2341 Wyoming Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20008 (tel. 202-
- 234-3770/71/72).
-
-
- ECONOMY
- Historically, there has been a dearth of information and
- reliable statistics about Afghanistan's economy. This
- was exacerbated by the Soviet invasion and ensuing civil
- war, which destroyed much of the underdeveloped country's
- infrastructure and disrupted normal patterns of economic
- activity.
-
- Agriculture
- The Afghan economy continues to be overwhelmingly
- agricultural, despite the fact that only 15% of its total
- land area is arable and less than 6% currently is
- cultivated. Agricultural production is constrained by an
- almost total dependence on erratic winter snows and
- spring rains for water; irrigation is primitive.
- Relatively little use is made of machines, chemical
- fertilizer, or pesticides.
-
- Grain production is Afghanistan's traditional
- agricultural mainstay. Overall agricultural production
- declined an average of 3.5% per year between 1978 and
- 1990. This can be attributed to sustained fighting,
- instability in rural areas, prolonged drought, and
- deteriorated infrastructure. Soviet efforts to disrupt
- production in resistance-dominated areas also contributed
- to this decline. Furthermore, Soviet efforts to
- centralize the economy through state ownership and
- control and consolidation of farmland into large
- collective farms contributed to lower production.
-
- The war against the Soviet Union and the ensuing civil
- war also led to migration to the cities and refugee
- flight to Pakistan and Iran, further disrupting normal
- agricultural production. Recent studies indicate that
- agricultural production and livestock numbers are less
- than one-half of what they were in 1978. It is estimated
- that Afghanistan's food production levels are about 15%
- lower than what is necessary to feed the population.
- Shortages are exacerbated by the country's already
- limited transportation network, which has deteriorated
- due to damage and neglect resulting from war and the
- absence of an effective central government.
-
- Opium is increasingly becoming a source of cash for many
- Afghans, especially since the breakdown in central
- authority after the Soviet withdrawal. Opium is easy to
- cultivate and transport and offers a quick source of
- income for returning refugees and other impoverished
- Afghans. Afghanistan is the second-largest producer of
- raw opium in the world, after Burma. In 1993, despite
- efforts by the U.S. and others to encourage alternative
- crops, poppy and opium production increased 8% and 7%,
- respectively, from a year earlier. Much of Afghanistan's
- opium production is shipped to laboratories in Pakistan
- and refined into heroin which is either consumed by a
- growing South Asian addict population or exported,
- primarily to Europe and North America.
-
- Trade and Industry
- Trade accounts for a small portion of the Afghan economy,
- and there are no reliable statistics relating to trade
- flows. Since the Soviet withdrawal and the collapse of
- the Soviet Union, other limited trade relationships
- appear to be emerging with Iran, Pakistan, and the West.
- Afghanistan trades little with the United States; its
- 1992 trade is estimated at $6 million. Afghanistan does
- not enjoy U.S. most-favored-nation (MFN) trading status,
- which was revoked in 1986.
-
- Afghanistan is endowed with a wealth of natural
- resources, including extensive deposits of coal, salt,
- chromium, iron ore, gold, fluorite, talc, copper, and
- lapis lazuli. Unfortunately, the country's remote and
- rugged terrain, and inadequate transportation network,
- usually have made mining these resources unprofitable.
-
- The most important resource has been natural gas, first
- tapped in 1967. At their peak during the 1980s, natural
- gas sales accounted for $300 million a year in export
- revenues (56% of the total). Ninety percent of these
- exports went to the Soviet Union to pay for imports and
- debts. However, during the withdrawal of Soviet troops
- in 1989, Afghanistan's natural gas fields were capped to
- prevent sabotage by the mujahidin. Restoration of gas
- production has been hampered by internal strife and the
- disruption of traditional trading relationships following
- the collapse of the Soviet Union.
-
- Transportation
- Landlocked Afghanistan has no rail-ways, but the Amu
- Darya (Oxus) River, which forms part of Afghanistan's
- border with Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, and Tajikistan, has
- barge traffic. During their occupation of the country,
- the Soviets completed a bridge across the Amu Darya and
- built a motor vehicle and railroad bridge between Termez
- and Jeyretan.
-
- Most roadbuilding occurred in the 1960s, funded by the
- U.S. and the Soviet Union. The Soviets built a road and
- tunnel through the Salang Pass in 1964, connecting
- northern and southern Afghanistan. A highway connecting
- the principal cities of Herat, Kandahar, Ghazni, and
- Kabul forms the primary road system.
-
- The highway system requires significant reconstruction,
- and regional roads are in a state of disrepair. The poor
- state of the Afghan transportation and communication
- networks has further fragmented and hobbled the
- struggling economy.
-
- Economic Development and Recovery
- Afghanistan embarked on a modest economic development
- program in the 1930s. The government founded banks,
- introduced paper money, established a university,
- expanded primary, secondary, and technical schools, and
- sent students abroad for education. In 1956, the Afghan
- Government promulgated the first in a long series of
- ambitious development plans. By the late 1970s, these
- had achieved only mixed results due to flaws in the
- planning process as well as inadequate funding and a
- shortage of the skilled managers and technicians needed
- for implementation.
-
- These constraints on development have been exacerbated by
- the flight of refugees and the disruption and instability
- stemming from the Soviet occupation and ensuing civil
- war. Today, economic recovery and long-term development
- will depend on establishing an effective and stable
- political system.
-
- The UN and the international donor community continue to
- provide considerable humanitarian relief. Since its
- inception in 1988, the umbrella UN Office for the
- Coordination of Humanitarian Assistance to Afghanistan
- (UNOCHA) has channeled $512 million in multilateral cash
- assistance to Afghan refugees and vulnerable per-sons
- inside Afghanistan. The U.S. and Japan are the leading
- contributors to this relief effort. One of its key tasks
- is to eliminate from priority areas (such as villages,
- arable fields, and roads) some of the estimated 10
- million land-mines which continue to litter the Afghan
- landscape. Afghanistan is the most heavily mined country
- in the world; mine-related injuries number up to 100 per
- month. Without successful mine clearance, refugee
- repatriation, political stability, and economic
- reconstruction will be severely constrained.
-
- The UN, through the UN Development Program (UNDP), is
- expected to play a major role in post-war recovery and
- reconstruction of Afghanistan. In November 1993, the
- UNDP Action Plan for the Immediate Rehabilitation of
- Afghanistan identified more than $600 million in quick-
- impact development projects which could be implemented
- within two years where security conditions permit.
-
-