This situation I can explain As - Afghanistan forcefully married to Pakistan because of geography limitation but they love to India without any conditions.
India has done a wonderful job by doing development work in Afghanistan.
(1) The
building of Afghanistan’s Parliament in Kabul (the complex includes a library, so in that sense India did build a library in the country).
(2) The
restoration of the Stor palace in the same city.
(3) Rebuilding of the Habibia High School, also in the capital, and
providing it with grants-in-aid.
(4) R
econstruction of the Salma dam, now known as the Afghan-India Friendship Dam.
(5) The establishment of an
electricity transmission line from Pul-e-Khumri to Kabul.
(6) Reconstructing the Indira Gandhi Institute for Child Health/Indira Gandhi Children’s Hospital in Kabul (which had also been built with India’s help decades ago) and
supporting it in many ways.
(7)
financing the establishment of the Afghan National Agriculture Sciences and Technology University (ANASTU) in Kandahar and assisting it in various ways.
(8) constructing the Chimtala power substation in Kabul.
(9)
building the cricket stadium in Kandahar.
(10) building a
cold storage warehouse in the same city.
(11) upgrading telephone exchanges in some provinces.
(12) expanding the national television network.
(13) digging tube wells in some of the provinces.
(14) reportedly rehabilitating three water reservoirs.
(15) establishing five toilet and sanitation complexes in Kabul.
(16) Zaranj-Delaram road,
(17) hundreds of smaller, less visible and harder to trace projects, including community development ones. The completed ones include dozens of schools and basic health clinics: check the
report here for lists and maps. (I can’t find a library there.) Even here, however, charity meets pragmatism: the large projects were often realized in the area of the capital or the safer northern and western parts of the country, while many of the small projects
were earlier spread across the Pashtun borderlands, thereby directly challenging Pakistan’s influences in this zone (see also the map in the report linked above).
(18) hundreds of buses for the Kabul transportation system.
(19) 285 military vehicles for the Afghan National Army.
(20)
Mi-25 and
Mi-35 choppers for the air force.
(21) 10 ambulances for public hospitals in five cities.
(22)
Airbus aircraft for the national airlines.
(23)
materials for substations and a transmission line in the Faryab province.
(24) high protein biscuits for Afghan schoolchildren.
(25) shipments of wheat and pulses.
(26) funds to an Afghan Red Crescent Society program.
(27) free medicine and medical consultations in its medical missions in five Afghan cities.
(28) Afghan public institutions with technical advisers.
(29) training for Afghan public servants and policemen.
(30) hundreds of scholarships for Afghan students; vocational courses for Afghan youth
(31) lets Afghanistan’s national cricket team use
an Indian stadium as its home ground.