world-bank-670
— File Photo

WASHINGTON: Afghanistan is having trouble keeping hard-earned development gains due to looming security challenges when Nato military forces withdraw in 2014, an internal World Bank audit said Monday.

The review said the Bank's programs in the war-torn country had achieved “impressive results” in areas like public health, telecommunications and community development.

However, it warned that “with the expected reduction of the international presence in 2014, sustainability of development gains remains a major risk because of capacity constraints and inadequate human resources planning on the civilian side.”

The document pointed to continuing weaknesses, especially the lack of government structure at the regional and local levels, which the audit called “a risk to the sustainability of national programs.”

Without viable district or provincial institutions, the investment in community organisations at the village level may not be sustainable, substantial project benefits notwithstanding,” the review added.

In addition, it said, planning for the civilian sector is “seriously lagging” behind that for the military.

“There is a risk of creating an imbalance among Afghan institutions,” the audit said.

The Bank said that over the past decade, Afghanistan has achieved strong gains in health care, extending basic services to all provinces and cutting the infant mortality rate.

Education has also expanded significantly: primary school enrollment rose to 7.2 million students in 2011 from one million in 2001.

“Enrollment of girls has grown from a negligible number to almost three million,” the audit noted.

But development activities have been hampered by “contradictory advice and competing donor programs,” and the inability given the security problems to run a full development program on the ground, it added.

“The Afghanistan country program operates under extraordinarily difficult circumstances, wherein security conditions pose a continuing challenge to Afghanistan's development and external-partner support.”

It cited the unavailability of staff to be deployed inside the country, and frequent turnover of those who are.

That in itself has hampered the ability of the Bank to implement programs.

But the review praised the Afghan government as a “committed partner with the vision to rebuild the Afghan state and modernize Afghan society.”

The government has shown its determination to build a modern state out of the ruins and ravages of more than two decades of war,” it added.

Opinion

Editorial

A breakthrough?
07 May, 2026

A breakthrough?

The whole world would welcome an end to this pointless war.
Missed opportunity
07 May, 2026

Missed opportunity

A BIG opportunity to industrialise Pakistan has just passed us by. This has been reconfirmed by the investment...
Punishing dissent
07 May, 2026

Punishing dissent

THE Sindh government’s treatment of the Aurat March this week was a disgraceful assault on democratic rights. What...
The May war
Updated 06 May, 2026

The May war

Rationality demands that both states come to the table and discuss their grievances, and their solutions in a mature manner.
Looking inwards
06 May, 2026

Looking inwards

REGULAR appraisals by human rights groups and activists should not be treated by the authorities as attempts to ...
Feeling the heat
06 May, 2026

Feeling the heat

ANOTHER heatwave season has begun, and once again, the state is scrambling to respond to conditions it has long been...