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DESTACADO

Informe 2013

El ascenso del Sur: Progreso humano en un mundo diverso
está disponible para su descarga gratuita

Afghanistan's Progress Is Threatened by Poverty, UN Agency Says

Bloomberg.com

Afghanistan's progress on security and stability, made since the Taliban were ousted in 2001, is threatened by poverty and inequality, the United Nations Development Program said.

``The fragile nation could easily tumble back into chaos,'' the Development Program said in the first report on living conditions it's done in the country. ``The basic human needs and genuine grievances of the people, lack of jobs, health, education, income, dignity and opportunities for participation must be met.''

Security, education and women's rights have improved, the UN agency said. The country of 28.5 million people has undergone more than two decades of civil conflict and natural disasters including years of drought.

Afghanistan is ranked 173 out of 178 nations on the UNDP's 2004 Human Development Index with only a few countries in Africa's sub-Saharan region listed lower, the agency said. Life expectancy in Afghanistan is 44.5 years, at least 20 years lower than in neighboring countries, the organization said.

The country will take another step toward democracy this year when parliamentary and local elections are held. Afghanistan held its first direct presidential poll on Oct. 9, which was won by Hamid Karzai, 46, who has led the government since the Taliban were overthrown in the U.S.-led war on terrorism.

``The considerable vote of confidence that the government received through landmark elections should encourage accountability toward the Afghan people first,'' said Shahrbanou Tadjbakhsh, the editor-in-chief of the report, according to a UN statement. ``Human security cannot take a back seat to the national and international security interests of other nations.''

Militia Control

The U.S. has 18,000 soldiers in the country hunting fugitives from the Taliban and al-Qaeda. The North Atlantic Treaty Organization has 8,500 soldiers in the UN-authorized International Security Assistance Force responsible for security in Kabul.

U.S. troops operating in the country have been accused of abusing suspects in Afghanistan. Documents obtained by the American Civil Liberties Union describe instances of prisoner abuse by U.S. forces in Afghanistan that were investigated only briefly, the New York Times reported on Feb. 18.

Militias also remain in control of many areas of Afghanistan and people are subjected to violence by militiamen, torture by security forces and attacks by Taliban fighters, the agency said.

Afghanistan has disarmed 80 percent of its estimated 50,000 militiamen under a joint program with the United Nations, the UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan said last week.

Handing in Weapons

A total of 40,104 militiamen have handed in their weapons under the program that provides training to help find jobs in civil society, the UN said. The northern region of Mazar-e-Sharif was declared disarmed in December and Jalalabad in the east earlier this week, according to the UN.

Afghanistan has created a national army of more than 21,000 soldiers since the Taliban regime was ousted.

Women, who were kept out of society under the rule of the Taliban, are protected under the country's new constitution that outlaws gender discrimination, the UN Development Program said.

``Traditional mentalities still hold women back,'' the agency said. ``Poverty, malnutrition, exclusion from public life, rape, violence, poor health care, illiteracy and forced marriage are among the many human security concerns.''

The ``Back to School'' campaign carried out in Afghanistan has seen about 3 million children and 70,000 teachers return to schools. The years of fighting destroyed 80 percent of the country's 6,900 schools, according to the report.

Afghanistan, the world's biggest opium producer, is taking steps with the help of the international community to combat the drugs trade. Poppy cultivation, the main engine of economic growth in Afghanistan, increased 64 percent in 2004, the UN said in a report in November. The opium poppy is the raw ingredient in producing heroin.

Growing Economy

Over the next decade, the country's non-drug gross domestic product is estimated to grow by between 10 and 12 percent, the Development Program said.

Afghanistan's civil conflict helped create the world's biggest refugee population with where more than 6 million people fled their homes, most of them moving to Pakistan and Iran. More than 1.8 million refugees have returned from Pakistan and 600,000 from Iran under a UN program started in 2002.

An estimated 3.4 million Afghan refugees are still living outside the country, the UN said.

The majority of an estimated 1 million people displaced inside Afghanistan in 2002 have now returned to their homes, the Development Program said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Paul Tighe in Sydney at ptighe@bloomberg.net

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