US watchdog highlights dire state of Afghan roads
KABUL: Billions of dollars spent building up Afghanistan’s road infrastructure over more than a decade risk going to waste because of poor maintenance, a US Congressional oversight body said on Sunday.
The Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction said US agencies had spent $2.8 billion since 2002 building roads in Afghanistan but wear and tear as well as the Taliban insurgency had damaged the system badly.
“USAID and (the Department of Defense) spent billions of dollars on road construction in Afghanistan, but have had only limited success in ensuring the long-term sustainability of those roads,” the report said.
Improving transport links will be vital if Afghanistan is to develop an economy strong enough to stand on its own once international donors, who earlier this year pledged some $15 billion in aid to 2020, leave.
But the dire state of the highways, exposed to a harsh climate and regularly blocked and mined by insurgents, is regularly highlighted by horrific road accidents which occur periodically.
SIGAR’s report said a recent survey it conducted had shown that 54 per cent of the country’s road infrastructure needed rehabilitation beyond simple repairs, with maintenance efforts hindered by poor security, lack of capacity and corruption.
The official was quoted as saying that 20 per cent of Afghanistan’s roads were destroyed and 80 per cent continued to deteriorate. Other officials said proper maintenance of the system would require $100m a year.
Published in Dawn, October 31st, 2016