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US watchdog warns of top seven threats to Afghan reconstruction
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Dec 10, 2014


China tells US to 'correct its ways' after torture report
Beijing (AFP) Dec 10, 2014 - China on Wednesday urged the United States to "correct its ways" after a damning US Senate report detailed use of torture by the CIA.

"China has consistently opposed torture," Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei told a regular briefing.

"We believe the US side should reflect upon itself, correct its ways and earnestly respect and abide by the rules of international conventions."

Rights groups say China's own justice system is riddled with abuses and that it is not uncommon for confessions to be extracted through torture.

Beijing says it attaches great importance to human rights and that it carries out detentions in accordance with the law.

In a report that has drawn international calls for criminal prosecution, the US Senate said that CIA torture of Al-Qaeda suspects was far more brutal than acknowledged and failed to produce useful intelligence.

China and the US regularly spar over human rights, with Washington expressing concern over the detention and jailing of prominent rights activists by China's communist authorities.

A senior Chinese official on Monday defended his country's human rights record against Western criticism, saying Beijing favoured the "right to development and survival" over civil liberties.

Speaking in Brussels after an EU-China rights dialogue, Li Junhua told a press conference: "Neither party should judge the other country's system."

He added that Europe is "focused on civil liberties and the right of government but in China we're talking about the right to development and the right to survival."

China has made "great strides in the last 30 years on human rights," which compare to a hundred years of progress in Europe, he said.

Corruption, weak armed forces and a huge budget gap -- a US watchdog overseeing rebuilding efforts in Afghanistan Wednesday released a list of seven "high-risk areas" leaving projects vulnerable to waste and fraud as troops withdraw.

"American taxpayer dollars and our strategic and humanitarian interests in Afghanistan are being placed at unnecessarily high levels of risk by widespread failure to track results, anticipate problems, and implement prudent countermeasures," the special inspector general for Afghanistan reconstruction (SIGAR) John Sopko said.

"And, unlike countries at peace, those problems can lead to lives lost and our national security objectives hindered or denied."

After some 13 years, the US-led NATO combat mission will officially end on December 31 although some troops will remain to train and support the Afghan army and police, who have taken on responsibility for suppressing worsening Islamist violence nationwide.

Sopko and the SIGAR team have warned consistently that as international troops withdraw it will be increasing hard to keep an eye on reconstruction projects without their protection.

SIGAR, set up by Congress in 2008 to monitor the billions of dollars spent in Afghanistan, has set out seven issues which pose a "high-risk" which Sopko said posed "a potent threat" to reconstruction efforts.

Here is the list:

CORRUPTION/RULE OF LAW: "Corruption is one of the most serious threats to the US-funded Afghanistan reconstruction effort," the watchdog says, highlighting that it has repeatedly raised this issue.

It questions whether the State Department has developed a proper strategy to battle graft and drawn up plans to protect US funds, as well as to tackling corruption within the Afghan government.

SUSTAINABILITY: The watchdog maintains that much of $104 billion spent by the US since the 2001 invasion to oust the Islamic Taliban militants risks being wasted "because the Afghans cannot sustain the investment without" continued donor support.

In 2013 the war-torn country's annual revenue was only $2 billion, while its expenditure was $5.4 billion. The IMF expects the funding gap to remain at about $7.7 billion through 2018.

Improving the energy sector for example is vital to the country's long-term economic progress, but the Afghans cannot afford to pay for much of the electric power infrastructure provided by the Americans.

Likewise, millions invested in the health sector could also go up in smoke because the Afghan government will not be able to afford to maintain and operate new hospitals.

THE CAPACITY OF THE AFGHAN SECURITY FORCES: Some $62 billion or, more than half of all the US expenditure, has gone towards building up the Afghan security forces. Military experts have warned this could be put at risk unless proper training and advise missions are left in place.

DIRECT FUNDING ASSISTANCE: Since 2010 the US and international donors have been replacing aid in the form of contracts and grants, to direct assistance into the Kabul government's coffers to give Afghans more freedom to manage their budget. SIGAR is increasingly concerned that many Afghan government agencies are ill-equipped to handle such a flow of money and has called for strong internal controls and greater oversight.

COUNTERNARCOTICS: "The expanding cultivation and trafficking of drugs puts the entire US and international investment in the reconstruction of Afghanistan at risk," the report says. Drug-trafficking feeds the Taliban and Al-Qaeda insurgency as well as corruption and organized crime.

CONTRACT MANAGEMENT: US agencies have failed to consistently manage civilian contractors, and no one knows precisely how much has been spent on them since 2002. The report also detailed a number of problematic projects under construction by local contractors.

STRATEGY AND PLANNING: A lack of implementation or operational planning "threatens to cause agencies and projects to work at counter-purposes, spend money on frivolous endeavors or fail to coordinate efforts."


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Seven students of a prominent scholar from China's Uighur minority have been convicted of separatism in a secret trial and given prison sentences of three to eight years, a lawyer said Tuesday. They were students of Beijing economics professor Ilham Tohti, who was convicted of separatism in September and sentenced to life in prison. The move was seen as part of Beijing's efforts to silen ... read more


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