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This is an archived USAID document retained on this web site as a matter of public record.

USAID Announces $15 Million in Quick-Impact Programs for Afghanistan's Reconstruction


U.S. AGENCY FOR INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
PRESS RELEASE


  
 

Additional Media Resources:

Multimedia
Photo: USAID Administrator Andrew S. Natsios meets with Afghanistan Interim Chairman Hamid Karzai in Afghanistan
Images Available for Publication
Streaming Video of Event

Press Releases,
Testimony,
and Fact Sheets

09/03/02: OFDA Situation Report #42
08/14/02: USAID Welcomes Increase In Crop Production In Afghanistan
07/25/02: USAID Arranges for $17,000 of School Supplies to Reach Afghan Students
07/25/02: USAID Provides Internet Center to Afghan Ministry of Commerce
06/06/02: USAID Funds Ministry of Water and Electricity in Afghanistan
06/06/02: U.S. Government Assistance to Afghan Media
05/23/02: USAID Airlifts Sewing Machines and Fabric as Part of a Global Partnership to Provide Jobs and School Uniforms for Afghan Women and Girls
04/11/02: USAID Announces $5 Million Initiative to Improve Public Health Services in Afghanistan
04/03/02: USAID Delivering High-Quality Wheat Seed to Afghanistan

Afghanistan Country Information
Humanitarian Crisis in Central Asia
Office of Transition Initiatives
U.S. State Department Background Note
CIA World Factbook Listing

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WASHINGTON, DC 20523
PRESS OFFICE
http://www.usaid.gov
(202) 712-4320

2002-12

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
January 29, 2002

Contact: USAID Press Office

Washington, D.C. - Laura Bush, Secretaries Elaine Chao, Tommy Thompson and Rod Paige joined the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) Administrator Andrew S. Natsios and the Chairman of the Afghan Interim Authority Hamid Karzai today to highlight the first U.S. government-funded, quick-impact programs for Afghanistan reconstruction. Key ministers of the Afghan Interim Authority and members of the U.S. Congress were also in attendance.

USAID announced more than $15 million in quick-starting programs, particularly in education, women's development, health and agriculture to meet the Afghan people's most pressing needs.

"Our goal is to move quickly. We need to make a difference in the lives of Afghans. They need to see visible progress," said Administrator Natsios, who returned from Afghanistan on Sunday. "We are working closely with Chairman Karzai and his ministers to help the Afghan people rebuild their country. We agree education, health and agriculture are top priorities."

USAID is spending $6.5 million to print and distribute 9,675,000 textbooks teaching science, math and reading to grades 1-12 in time for the opening day of Afghanistan's schools on March 23, 2002. The textbooks are written in the Afghan languages of Pushto and Dari and will be accompanied with blackboards and other school supplies. During the next 12 months, 20 teams of five teacher-trainers will conduct four-week training sessions with 4,000 educators.

"A new school term will begin in Afghanistan in March. Many girls will enter the classroom for the first time," said Mrs. Bush. "Rebuilding the school system must be a priority. Nothing is more important to Afghanistan's future than giving its children the tools and skills they need to learn and succeed."

USAID is contributing $7 million to support spot reconstruction grants especially focusing on agricultural rehabilitation, programs for women and support to the Afghan Interim Authority. In the health sector, USAID is providing UNICEF with $600,000 to vaccinate 2.26 million children against measles.

USAID is granting $1 million from the Leahy War Victims Fund to support the social and economic rehabilitation and integration of landmine victims and other disabled people. These funds also will provide training and specialized technical expertise to Afghan orthopedic technologists.

This $15 million plan is part of USAID's total $167 million Afghanistan reconstruction effort. This amount is part of the U.S. government's total pledge made on January 21, 2002 at the Afghanistan reconstruction conference in Tokyo to contribute $296.75 million in Fiscal Year 2002 to the reconstruction of Afghanistan.

The U.S. Agency for International Development is the U.S. government agency that has provided economic and humanitarian assistance worldwide for more than 40 years.

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Last Updated on: December 30, 2008