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FOREIGN SECRETARY:
Good Afternoon Ladies and Gentlemen. I would like to extend a very warm
welcome to His Excellency Hamid Karzai, President of Afghanistan, and
His Excellency Kofi Annan, Secretary General of the United Nations. The
Secretary General and the President are here, as you know, with delegates
from 60 countries and representatives of many international organisations
for the International Conference which we are holding today on Afghanistan.
It is four years ago since Afghanistan was freed from rule by the Taliban
regime. In that really very short period, the Afghan people, supported
by the international community and the United Nations, have achieved a
huge amount. Afghanistan has a new constitution, it has held parliamentary
and Presidential elections. As we heard this morning from the President,
the economy is growing, human rights and basic freedoms are better respected
today than they have been for at least a generation. Women, excluded from
all public life by the Taliban, are now involved, being educated, at work
and make up one quarter of the parliament – a higher proportion
than the number of women in the United Kingdom parliament. And during
my repeated visits to Afghanistan, from the dark early days straight after
the war, I have been able myself to witness the huge improvements which
President Karzai has led.
But no-one under-estimates the major problems which still lie in the future
and which require long term commitment and investment from all involved,
and that is why the United Nations and the government of Afghanistan,
with the United Kingdom, are co-chairing today’s conference.
The Conference set a framework for international engagement in Afghanistan
over the next five years with the launch of the Afghanistan Compact. The
key principle of the Compact is giving more ownership of the process of
development and reconstruction to the Afghan government and people. So
the Compact agreed establishes a new coordinating and monitoring mechanism
in Kabul which will be co-chaired by the Afghan government and the United
Nations. It will help ensure that international support for Afghanistan
is used in the most effective and efficient way possible, avoiding duplication
of effort and focusing on those areas which will best help the Afghan
people. And I would like, if I may, to put on record my thanks to you
Secretary General for lending the United Nations’ support to this
important mechanism.
The Compact also includes clear benchmarks and timelines, agreed by the
Afghan government, covering security, governance, institutional capacity,
counter-narcotics, economic and social development. The goals which we
have set are ambitious, but they are achievable, and if we reach them
we will be making a real difference on the ground to the lives of many
millions.
And on that note, I am pleased to confirm that today the United Kingdom
has made a new pledge of £455 million sterling over the next three
years to Afghanistan. In the session currently under way at Lancaster
House at the conference, the Afghanistan government is presenting its
Interim Afghanistan National Development Strategy which sets out the political
and economic plans and priorities over the next five years. Then my colleague,
John Reid, will chair a session on security. And the United Kingdom’s
strong commitment to Afghanistan’s security was underlined by Secretary
Reid’s announcement last week that British troops will deploy to
Helmand in the south. And later this afternoon, the Afghan government
will launch its up-dated national drugs control strategy. This will be
a chance for nations to contribute to the newly launched Counter-Narcotics
Trust Fund.
Tomorrow the conference will be focusing on governance, the rule of law
and human rights, economic and social development, and aid effectiveness
and co-ordination. And I think it is fair to say that the breadth and
depth of the discussions here today demonstrate clearly that the international
community remains strongly committed, indeed I think even more strongly
than ever, to supporting the people of Afghanistan for the long term.
PRESIDENT KARZAI:
Thank you very much Your Excellency Mr Straw, Your Excellency, Mr Kofi
Annan. It is a tremendous pleasure for Afghanistan to be in London today
to celebrate the success of the past four years in the areas in which
we have succeeded, and to celebrate the successful completion of the Bonn
process. Today we are also very, very grateful Mr Straw to your government,
to the people of the United Kingdom, for providing us this grand opportunity
of welcoming, together with you, more than 60 countries and organisations
to hear Afghanistan’s story and to pledge for the future success
of our country.
As you mentioned, we have presented today Afghanistan’s Compact
which will bind Afghanistan in a commitment towards further improvement
in the governance, justice and human rights of the country, and which
will commit Afghanistan to provide better services for the country through
the enhancement of government capacity to fight against drugs, the continuing
fight against terrorism and in building state institutions. We are glad
that this Compact has also been joined by the international community
with us, by the United Nations with us. Afghanistan remains committed
to its cooperation with the rest of the world and with the United Nations.
Afghanistan is proud to be once again a member of the family of nations
and a member that now is there with integrity and pride, and Afghanistan
would like to continue on this road towards more success, towards prosperity
and towards stronger institutionalised democracy in Afghanistan, and Afghanistan,
Sirs, Excellencies, will remain to be a great asset for security in the
region and the world.
And I thank you once again, Mr Straw, for the tremendous support you have
given, and for the people of the United Kingdom, for giving us this excellent
opportunity to renew pledges and to look on the successful past.
MR KOFI ANNAN:
Thank you very much, Mr President, Mr Prime Minister, Ladies and Gentlemen,
I shall be brief.
I want to associate myself fully with what the President and the Foreign
Secretary have said. I believe this is a most useful and timely conference,
and the Compact is a comprehensive plan for the next stages of Afghanistan’s
development. As the Afghan government, under the able leadership of President
Karzai and the international community, were to implement the plan, the
United Nations will stand fully ready to assist, as we have in the past,
we will be there on the ground with the Afghan people. After being forced
to sacrifice so much for war, the Afghan people have willingly given even
more to peace. And as I said this morning, they expect peace dividends
and they deserve it.
QUESTION (Robin Oakley, CNN): On the question of the narcotics
trade in Afghanistan, can I ask Mr Straw first of all, if the British
have been charged with the eradication programme so far, why has it achieved
so little success? And can I ask President Karzai, what sort of timescale
do you foresee for the total eradication of the opium trade in Afghanistan?
FOREIGN SECRETARY: Let me
say that I think our counter-narcotics strategy achieved a very great
deal. What however is the case is the problem is more deep seated than
I think anybody understood when we began this, and what we have to set
against our programme and our effectiveness is where Afghanistan and the
world would be if we had not been working as closely as we have been with
Afghanistan and our other international partners to counter the narcotics
trade. So it has been difficult, but I am in no doubt at all that our
programme up to now has stopped much worse happening, and for the future
should help to set Afghanistan on a much better path.
PRESIDENT KARZAI: Sir, the
narcotics trade and the poppy growing in Afghanistan is the result of
three decades of desperation, where no Afghan family, no Afghan individual
was sure tomorrow whether they would have their house standing, their
children alive, of whether they would be staying in their villages or
towns. That drove the Afghan people into desperation and desperation moved
them away from the lovely orchards and vineyards they had into the poppy
fields. Last year we announced to the Afghan people that poppy was against
Afghanistan, and against our religion and ethics. In response to that,
voluntarily 21% of the poppy fields that were grown in the past refrained
from growing poppies, so we had a reduction in 21% of the poppy fields
in the country. This year we are hoping to achieve the same, or close
to it. But let us recognise that this is a tough fight, it is a real economic
situation that we have to fight. In my view, and in the view of the United
Nations that shares it with me, perhaps Afghanistan will need at least
10 years of a strong systematic consistent effort in eradication, in law
enforcement and in the provision to the Afghan farmer of an alternative
economy in order for us to be free of poppies by that time. So I would
give it a decade, at least.
QUESTION (BBC World Service):
I have got two questions, one for Mr Straw and one for Mr Karzai. It has
been acknowledged all along that the lack of security is a major obstacle
in Afghanistan and the Afghan government in recent months has been stressing
the regional factor, but yet we haven’t seen much in this conference.
I wanted to know, Mr Straw, what is your response? And Mr Karzai, I would
like to ask you, before the conference you have said, and this is the
wish of the Afghan government, that if not all of the international help,
but at least half of it, should go through the Afghan government, and
the World Bank was also in recent documents praising the Afghan government
by how much it had achieved in the last four years. Are you optimistic
that this conference will be a change for that direction?
FOREIGN SECRETARY: On your
first question about security, security has been a theme which has run
through almost every contribution, and where there is actually a session
on security which is taking place now, and it is chaired by Defence Secretary
John Reid.
PRESIDENT KARZAI: We have
expressed our desire that Afghanistan should take more and more of a leadership
role in the formulation and implementation of the reconstruction and enhancing
the capabilities of the Afghan administration. That will be possible only
when the international community channels more of its assistance through
the Afghan government and other state institutions in Afghanistan. We
hope that it will be taken as such recognised by the rest of the world.
We saw some recognition of it today in the remarks by various countries,
for which we are grateful, and the happier we will be the more they increase
their assistance through the Afghan government.
QUESTION (Channel 4 News):
Foreign Secretary, and indeed President Karzai, isn't one of the key problems
that no matter what the fine words that emerge from conferences like this,
on the ground the Afghan people are getting a very different message.
I refer only today to another American soldier being convicted for the
ill-treatment and torture of Afghan prisoners at Bagram. That sends a
completely mixed message, whereas conferences like this are clearly sending
another message.
PRESIDENT KARZAI: Ah well,
well, well, well, well. Now convicting the soldier for committing an atrocity
or misconduct is part of daily life, people get convicted, people make
mistakes and they are tried and they are given their due sentence. There
is a massive difference between a situation there on the ground at that
microscopic level, and this massive international conference for support
to Afghanistan. The Afghan people especially see the difference. They
have been hoping for such a conference, a conference like this, and the
support of the international community is equally the most important factor,
alongside the will of the Afghan people to move forward. And these two
elements have actually been the driving force for Afghanistan in the past
four years that have brought us today’s successful end of the Bonn
conference, Bonn agreement.
QUESTION:
Inaudible.
PRESIDENT KARZAI: I don’t
see that at all, no rather I see a very good message today, that too is
a good message. Those who make mistakes have to be punished for it.
FOREIGN SECRETARY: If someone
who has committed wrong was going unpunished, that would be one thing,
what this shows is that sometimes people do commit wrongs, and then because
the rule of law applies they are punished. And one of the many fundamental
differences between Afghanistan today, and Afghanistan under the Taliban,
is there is now a rule of law, and anybody who has been to Afghanistan
just to see it, as I have done, backwards and forwards, can see the difference
and the difference is huge.
QUESTION (Afghan TV): The
military leadership in Afghanistan, is there any commitment taken from
the neighbouring countries, whether that leadership will succeed in the
future? You know that the main route of the insecurity in Afghanistan
is all the insecure events that happen in Afghanistan. Are there any measures
taken on the borders in order to prevent such insecurity measures, and
if there are such commitments, why are they not implemented?
FOREIGN SECRETARY: As I
understand it we have got very good interpreters …. The answer is
very simple, you are asking about what are we doing to try to overcome
insecurity, the whole purpose of the renewed remodelled international
force, and the fact that it is now extending not just from ISAF in Kabul,
but through the provincial reconstruction teams and other arrangements
elsewhere across the country, is in cooperation and at the request of
the Afghan government and people to work with them to enhance security,
and that for example is why we are sending a really considerable contingent
to Helmand in the south, precisely to assist in that endeavour.
QUESTION (Kabul Weekly): I would like to ask Mr Karzai,
in your international development strategy that has been presented by
the Afghan government, there is not any specific budget. How can a strategy
be implemented without a specific budget, a clear budget? If you have
a budget for this, are you sure that the international community is going
to commit the pledges that you require, or if you think that you are not
going to be provided with the budget required, don’t you think this
is a flawed strategy?
PRESIDENT KARZAI: Generally
speaking Afghanistan is going to need $4 billion annually so that we can
get rid of the situation created as a result of the decades of war. Today
we witnessed that there have been tremendous pledges, by the United States,
the UK, the EU, the World Bank, and until this afternoon we could get
$5 billion, and hopefully this will increase. The question as to what
is going to happen in five years time, of course we will have to see then.
QUESTION (Al Jazeera): …
Muslims, and especially Saudi Arabia, efforts in rebuilding Afghanistan?
PRESIDENT KARZAI: My brother, we are very happy also with
the help of the Muslim countries to Afghanistan. Pakistan and Iran are
our two neighbours and our brothers who are helping us, so is …
helping with the reconstruction of parts of the highway from Kabul to
Helmand, and the United Arab Emirates is helping us with various projects
of construction, and with the construction especially of an Islamic Madrassa
in Kabul that we inaugurated a few days ago. We also hope that other Islamic
countries will also contribute to the reconstruction of Afghanistan and
in that regard we are particularly happy with our brothers in the Islamic
countries.
QUESTION (Voice of America Persian Service):
Last night the P5 spoke in unison against the nuclear programme of the
Islamic Republic of Iran. At what point do you think, Mr Secretary General,
that the United Nations will use its good offices to bring about one voice
in support of the people of Iran, especially the bus drivers, over 110
of them were arrested last Saturday and their leader is still in prison,
and for the homosexual rights in Iran, and for women’s rights in
Iran?
MR ANNAN: I think it is
very clear that as the United Nations our policy has been to promote human
rights and rights of individuals to live in dignity and to have freedom
to go about their activities. I have had the opportunity myself to intervene
in some of these cases, I intervened in the case of Ganji, and it is an
issue that I often raise when I do have an opportunity. Obviously each
society has to go through changes and the pace differs from country to
country. We heard a lot about reform in Iran under the previous President,
the pace maybe has not been as fast as you would like, by the implication
in your question, which is also right, but we will continue to promote
these rights which are universal and should not be alien to any country,
any culture and any religion.
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