$1 Billion Later, Its Unclear If U.S. Cash Is Really Helping - TopicsExpress



          

$1 Billion Later, Its Unclear If U.S. Cash Is Really Helping Afghan Women ift.tt/1GL5D9E An audit says it’s too hard to know if American money is having an impact. Prisoners attend an English language class at a prison for women in Herat, western Afghanistan in December 2013. Omar Sobhani / Reuters The U.S. government has spent roughly $1 billion in two years to improve the lives of women in Afghanistan, but a new audit says theres no clear link between that spending and improvements in Afghan womens lives. The Department of Defense (DoD), the State Department and the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) do not clearly demonstrate the outcomes of U.S. efforts or the link between those efforts and reported improvements made in the lives and treatment of Afghan women, the 50-page audit, released on Thursday, says. We acknowledge that doing impact assessment is not easy, John Sopko, the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan, told BuzzFeed News. But if youre going to be spending billions in taxpayer dollars, you need to be able to show a return on investment. The office of the Special Investigator for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR) reviewed internal data and public reports detailing spending on womens programming by DoD, the State Department and USAID from 2011-2013. DoD spent nearly $5 million on women in the two-year period covered by the audit, while State spent nearly $62 million and USAID spent $850 million. But none of the agencies knew where, exactly, all that funding ended up. DoDs initial list of spending overlooked another $5 million the department spent building a center for womens economic empowerment, and an unspecified amount spent on U.S. employees who serve as gender advisors to the Afghan interior ministry. With DoD, they couldnt identify everything they were doing, but for what they could identify, they could tell us exactly what they spent, Sopko said. But USAID, in all 15 of the programs it claims benefitted Afghan women, couldnt explain how much was spent on womens issues, how many women benefited, or what the impact of the spending was, according to the audit. Thats largely because of a new, global approach at USAID and the State Department to spending money on womens issues. Instead of creating stand-alone programs to benefit women, the agency integrates or mainstreams womens issues into its broader programs. The idea is to make sure that general programming takes womens needs into consideration, even if a new project isnt specifically created for women. But the audit found that USAID in Afghanistan couldnt evaluate how any of the integrated programs actually affect womens lives, nor could it separate out how much of those programs budgets was actually spent on programming addressing womens needs. If you are going to identify these as programs for women, you should be able to tell us how much youre spending on that, Sopko said. Without separating that funding, USAID could exaggerate the amount of funding the agency actually spent on womens efforts, the audit said. None of this was news to Samira Hamidi. Hamidi, the former director of the Afghan Womens Network, said she was not surprised by the audit. Not at all. I have been saying this since 2011 that the programs the U.S. government is designing and the money they are sending through USAID and other sources [is] not helping women rights in Afghanistan, Hamidi told BuzzFeed News by telephone from Kabul. Thats why I say Im glad its on the record….They dont care what people from the outside talk [say]. I really hope it makes a kind of difference, gives a different overview to the different US institutions who are aiming to support women for the future. But Manizha Naderi, the executive director of Women for Afghan Women, felt differently. She has been working with the State Department directly since 2009. The department funds the womens shelters, family gathering centers and childrens support centers that Women for Afghan Women runs. Naderi said her organization has always been subject to clear monitoring and evaluation. I cant speak for USAID because we havent gotten USAID money, she said, but working with the State Department is a different experience than what the SIGAR audit is saying. In a statement emailed to BuzzFeed News, Larry Sampler, assistant to the administrator in the Office of Afghanistan and Pakistan Affairs, said USAID closely tracks money integrated into general programs. Samplers statement also said the agency tracks the impact of those funds. USAID declined to provide further details on either point. If this is your stated course of action, that you will be moving forward with mainstreaming gender as part of everything in the future, Sopko said, you do need to have some kind of mechanism to ensure that those stated goals for women are in fact being addressed. A letter from the U.S. Embassy in Kabul, issued in reply to and published with the audit, detailed many general improvements for women in Afghanistan, including school enrollments, healthcare improvements, the creation of a network of domestic violence shelters, and funding for women-owned businesses. But the auditors found no evidence linking those improvements directly to U.S. spending and, in several places, called reports claiming to make links anecdotal. There is no clear indication of the source or reliability of many of the statistics cited by State and USAID, or that the improvements cited were the result of the hundreds of millions of U.S. taxpayer dollars spent on programs intended to benefit Afghan women, the audit said. View Entire List › via BuzzFeed - Latest ift.tt/1Hmbzo8 Put the internet to work for you. Turn off or edit this Recipe (繼續閱讀...) ift.tt/1xC9LHB December 22, 2014 at 06:56AM 暗黑影子極道世界 :: 痞客邦 PIXNET :: ift.tt/12UUe7Y
Posted on: Sun, 21 Dec 2014 23:06:11 +0000

Trending Topics



Recently Viewed Topics




© 2015