Building blocks in place for Afghanistan's development, Ban tells Paris summit
12 June 2008 - With the launch of Afghanistan's own blueprint for development, fresh pledges from donors, the commitment of the
Government and a strengthened United Nations mandate, the key elements for the rebuilding of the strife-torn nation are
in place, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon told world leaders gathered in Paris.
"These are the building blocks of our new partnership and of a new deal for Afghanistan," Mr. Ban told the gathering,
which he co-hosted with French President Nicolas Sarkozy.
The International Conference in Support of Afghanistan witnessed the launch of the Afghan National Development Strategy,
the Government's five-year plan to reduce poverty and promote economic and social development.
Mr. Ban said that the UN supports the Strategy's concept of "Afghanization," explaining that such a policy was not only
about channelling more international assistance into Afghan institutions but to have all Afghans participate in the
rebuilding of their country.
"Afghanistan's development will in fact depend upon the aggregation of millions of decisions taken by Afghans every day
in every district," whether it be the decision by parents to send their children to school or not, the decision by
farmers to grow opium or not, or the decision of young men to join the insurgency or not, he said.
The Secretary-General stressed the need for the international community to channel its funds more and more through
Afghan structures, and for the Government to be able to account for the use of these funds with transparency and deliver
results.
He also called the elections due to take place in 2009 and 2010 a "crucial test of the institutions that we have created
together and of the confidence that Afghans have in them."
In a declaration issued at the end of the conference, participants voiced their support for the Strategy which "will be
our road map for joint action over the next five years and sets our shared priorities."
The declaration added that the Afghan Government and the international community have today made "a commitment to a
strengthened partnership, based on Afghan leadership, on a set of agreed priorities, and on mutual obligations."
On the margins of the conference, Mr. Ban met with a number of officials, including NATO Secretary-General Jaap de Hoop
Scheffer, Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini, Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi, and United States Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice.
He also held meetings with President Hamid Karzai and Mr. Sarkozy, before leaving Paris for London, the next stop on his
trip, which will also take him to Saudi Arabia.
ENDS