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India outdoes US aid efforts in Afghanistan

EjazR

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Afghanistan | International Aid | India

With a fraction of the money, India's aid program has yielded far better results.

HERAT, Afghanistan — If the underlying intent of international aid projects is to “win the hearts and minds” of the Afghan people, then by many measures the United States is failing.

Despite investing nearly $50 billion in the reconstruction of Afghanistan, only half of Afghans polled last year have a somewhat favorable or better view of the United States.

India, meanwhile, has managed to become one of the most-liked foreign countries in Afghanistan — with almost three-quarters of the population finding India somewhat favorable or better — after committing just $1.2 billion to the country.

Regional, often over-shadowed, governments like India are beginning to think more carefully about their relationship with Afghanistan as Western militaries, including the United States, approach deadlines to withdraw troops.

Aside from political motivations, recent attention on what Afghan officials say could be up to $3 trillion in untapped mineral resources has given neighboring countries more reason to forge a stronger foothold here.

“When the Western countries came to Afghanistan, many [neighboring countries] asked, ‘Why are we behind them? We should be leading here. We should have priority,’” said Bazin Khatibi, a political analyst in Herat and deputy of the Afghan National Congress Party. “Each of these countries is thinking about its own political strategy, they want to show that they are not weaker than other countries.”

For a nation like India that is not officially part of the coalition fighting the war in Afghanistan, soft power has proven the most effective means of projecting its influence.

Though some of India’s success in winning over Afghans has to do with historical ties between the two countries, when it comes to administering aid, analysts say India is often simply better than the United States at developing projects that locals find more tangible and effective.

“The Indians over a long period of time have not had so many projects of high magnitude compared to some of the other [international donors] … but they have a reputation for having targeted areas of specific need,” said Thomas Gouttierre, director of the Center for Afghanistan Studies at the University of Nebraska at Omaha.

Fisal Ahmed Zakeri, director of water management at the Ministry of Energy and Water in Herat, said that in his experience India is far better at implementing aid projects than United States. Zakeri has worked with U.S. organizations on a number of programs that he says are often plagued by inefficiency and poorly allocated resources.

Most recently, he worked with the U.S. Agency for International Development, or USAID, as it administered a small water accessibility study in Herat. His ministry offered to do the work for free, but he said USAID refused and instead gave the contract to an NGO, which then subcontracted it out to another NGO and so on until it ended up with a local village council that finally hired people to conduct the study.

“It seems that at the end nothing will be left because each organization takes money,” Zakeri said.

He compares this with the $180 million Salma Dam development in Herat, India’s biggest aid project in Afghanistan. Though it’s had delays and problems, Zakeri said it stands out when compared to U.S. projects because there are Indians on site to oversee the work and there hasn’t been unnecessary subcontracting.

That such inefficiencies or other forms of corruption don’t happen with non-Western projects may be more perception than reality, said Kate Clark, a senior analyst at the Afghanistan Analysts Network in Kabul.

While India was constructing a major road in Afghanistan, she said, the project fell victim to the same sort of poor oversight, corruption and poor craftsmanship that Afghans often complain about in Western projects.

Neighboring states “say [their involvement] is humanitarian, but they’ve got very clear strategic interests in Afghanistan,” Clark said.

India, for example, is interested in preventing Pakistan, its longtime enemy, from gaining too much influence here.

Fortunately for India, that interest actually appeals to nearly three-quarters of the population, which has a somewhat unfavorable or worse view of Pakistan and tend to blame it for their country’s problems.

These Afghans tend to view India’s aid work here as motivated primarily to curb the interests of Pakistan, something they strongly support, further bolstering India' s reputation as a benevolent neighbor, Gouttierre said.

India, of course, insists that it is here solely to help a traditional ally.

“We are trying to help Afghanistan to stand on its own two feet,” said Tara Chand, consul general for India in Herat.

Unlike previous aid projects in Asia, India does not stand to directly benefit from projects in Afghanistan. For example, it recently funded hydropower stations in Bhutan, which sends the majority of the power it generates to India.

“This is the first large-scale benevolent aid program, and I think it’s something of a gamble,” said Gareth Price, head of the Asia Program at the Chatham House in London. “If it works, and the [Afghan] government survives, then it will strengthen the relationship between Afghanistan and India.”

India has also focused largely on projects with tangible results, like dams or roads. Though the United States has invested in tangible projects, it has also spent millions of dollars on projects to build institutional capacity — training government bureaucrats, for example — that produce results that are often difficult for average Afghans to see.

Nine years into the war, Price said the United States has now begun shifting toward an Indian aid model, focusing on projects that produce brick-and-mortar results.
 
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Fortunately for India, that interest actually appeals to nearly three-quarters of the population, which has a somewhat unfavorable or worse view of Pakistan and tend to blame it for their country’s problems.

Any particular reason why majority of Afghans would blame Pakistan for their countries problem?

Is it because Pakistan is seen as a close ally of US led NATO forces?
 
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Any particular reason why majority of Afghans would blame Pakistan for their countries problem?

Is it because Pakistan is seen as a close ally of US led NATO forces?

Biggest would be their supporting the evil Taliban regime, they believe Pakistan supports the insurgents in spreading terror in their country, plus they have some boundary disputes as well on the Durand line.
 
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Biggest would be their supporting the evil Taliban regime, they believe Pakistan supports the insurgents in spreading terror in their country, plus they have some boundary disputes as well on the Durand line.


First reason is to all afghans. but second reason is only for some part of afghanistan, not entire country.
 
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Most of the american aid for handed directly in the hands of corrupt Afghan officals which then siphoned it off to their bank accounts..India on other hand largely contributed in terms of goods and services and not hard cash. So obviously its efforts are more visible and were a sensible step considering rampant corruption in afghanistan..we wish India and Afghans all the best!
 
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For ailing Afghan kids, a healing touch from India (Feature)

Quietly, India has been helping mend Afghan hearts. With hundreds of children in war-torn Afghanistan dying of congenital heart disease every year, many are now coming here for inexpensive treatment, thanks to a collaborative venture.

'Hundreds of children in Afghanistan lose their lives every year to complications arising from congenital heart defects. There is little or no medical infrastructure in place and very few cases are detected early, much less cured,' Salim Bahramand, general health director in the Afghan Red Crescent Society (ARCS), told IANS here.

For the past few months, Bahramand has been working closely with the Max India Foundation to treat Afghan children affected by this fatal heart problem. Together they have successfully treated 35 Afghan children and plan to expand the programme to treat, on a monthly basis, 30 Afghan patients from all the 35 provinces of Afghanistan.

Bahramand with his team has compiled a list of 2,200 patients, mostly children from newborns to 11-year-olds, suffering from these heart complications, in Afghanistan.

Based on the number in the waiting list and the severity of the ailment, he sends them to Rehman Hospital in Pakistan or the Max Hospital in south Delhi's Saket area.

Doctor Viresh Mahajan, head of department of paediatric cardiology in Max Hospital, who spearheaded this project with Bahramand, said: 'One factor responsible for the high rate of this disease is the prevalent custom of consanguineous marriage.'

The disease being strongly hereditary in nature, the death toll rises as first cousins after marriage pass the genes on to their offspring.

Shabnam, 6, was suffering from high lung pressure due to her heart ailment and in six more months would have suffered a complete lung failure. She was flown in from her hometown in Kabul a week ago and given treatment.

'Doctor Mahajan has told me that she's in a stable condition now, and within a couple of days, will resume a normal childhood. I cannot thank him enough,' said her father Mir Wais, 36, a cartpuller in Kabul.

Just out of the intensive care unit (ICU), Muzdha, 7, welcomes visitors with a faint smile. 'The case of Muzdha is quite extraordinary,' Bahramand said.

'She was suffering from a complex cyanotic heart problem with which less than 30 percent of the children live up to be 7. Most doctors and experts had given up on her. Still under observation, she's received the treatment well and is now expected to live a healthy life in her hometown of Mazar-e-Sharif,' said Bahramand.

Hari Boolchandani, head of International Patient Services in Max Healthcare, told IANS that the cost of treatment is a major factor prompting patients' families to come to India.

He said an American hospital takes $100,000 to treat these heart complications while in South Africa it costs around $30,000. The same operation in India, with one of the highest success rates of 97.5-98 percent, costs around $4,500-5,000.

The cost of Afghan patient's airfare, surgery and lodging is borne by ARCS and the Max India Foundation together.

One reason for high mortality rate in Aghanistan, Bahramand said, was the absence of proper equipment for fetal cardiography, a scan through which physical complications in the foetus can be detected early.

'During cardiography, which may be carried out when the baby is 16-17 weeks old, if complications are detected early, which may put the life of the child and its mother in peril in later stages, the doctors usually advise termination of pregnancy. This operation helps in containing child mortality rates to a great extent,' said Mahajan.

Mahajan and Bahramand are jointly working to train manpower in Afghanistan to attend to immediate, minor cases.

'Purchasing equipments isn't the main challenge here, nor is setting up the facility. The challenge is to produce trained and qualified doctors who're capable of attending to these cases in their home so that their dependency on us is reduced, and they become better equipped to fight this battle on their own,' said Mahajan.

'Currently, Afghan patients constitute a major chunk of international patients visiting Delhi, and till political stability is established there, we expect the numbers to increase,' Boolchandani told IANS.

ARCS is a non-profit organisation working for the people of Afghanistan on the same lines of the American or Indian Red Cross societies.

Apart from Shubnum and Muzdha, Parwan, four months old, Mina, 3 years, and Miwand, 7, who were suffering from lethal complications like a hole in the heart to a leaking valve in the heart, have found new life thanks to this collaborative effort.
 
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Some relations are more than foreign relations.

Indian Afghan relation is one of them. there's no denying that India has political interests in development of Afghanistan, but India has always looked to Afghanistan as a friend rather than an ally.

By no means Indian efforts in Afghanistan should be looked as charity, aid or compensation. Indian occupation in Afghanistan is completely isolated from political mess. The benefits are going directly to common Afghanis.
 
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