Japan s Assistance in Afghanistan:

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Political Support Security Mine- clearing by NGOs Vocational training (DDR) Tokyo Conference (2002) Collecting Heavy Weapons (DDR) Culture Preservation of Bamiyan ruins Infrastructure Agriculture and Rural De ve lopment Japan s Assistance in Afghanistan: Achievements Kabul-Kandahar Road Kabul International Airport Terminal Building Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan April 2010 T echnical support to rice farmers Education, Health and Humanitarian Assistance Building Schools Mother & Child health care vaccination Food Supply

Japan s Assistance to Afghanistan : Achievements and Major Outputs Political Support 5 conferences in Tokyo Tokyo Conference (2002.1) (Start of reconstruction process) DDR conference (2003.2) DIAG conference Ⅰ (2006.7) DIAG conference Ⅱ (2007.6) JCMB meeting (2008.2) Support for counterterrorism Maritime Interdiction activities Replenishment support to vessels engaged in the counter-terrorism Maritime Interdiction activities in the Indian Ocean 120 Japanese civilians based in Afghanistan (1) Japanese Embassy (2) JICA (120 Japanese experts dispatched each year and 170 Afghan trainees received yearly) (3) NGOs Total $ 6.5 billion of Assistance (1)Pledged $6.5 billion and implemented $2.35 billion(next to the US`s Pledged $36.9bn) (2)Covers democratic process, security improvement, human resources development, economic infrastructure and humanitarian assistance. 1. Political process (1) Bonn Process (2001-2005) Election support, election observation teams (2) Presidential election in 2009 Assistance to Independent Election Committee (US 36 million), election observation team 2. Security (1) DDR (Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration) G8 lead country. DDR of 60,000 ex-combatants completed in June 2006. 50,000 weapons and 100,000 heavy weapons collected (2) DIAG (Disbandment of Illegal Armed Groups) G8 lead country. 689 illegal armed groups out of 2,000 groups disbanded 100,000 weapons brought under GOA control 85 development projects in DIAG support area Cooperation with NATO to empower ANA on ammunition stockpile (NATO Trust Fund) (3) Police Reform, Counter-Narcotics Construction of Border Police Center in Nimruz (Afghan-Pakistan-Iran border) (ongoing) Construction of Border Custom Facilitiesin Tahar (Afghan-Tajikistan Border) (ongoing) Assistance equivalent to salary of all 80,000 policemen for 6 month Police training in Japan Custom and border control assistance in Afghanistan and Central Asia through OSCE 3. Infrastructure (1) Trunk Roads 650 km roads (Ring Road and others)(implemented or decided) (2) Development of Kabul city Construction of Kabul International Airport Terminal Provision of 115 public buses Master Plan of Kabul Metropolitan City Development 4. Basic Human Needs (1) Education, Vocational Training 650 schools constructed or repaired 10,000 teachers trained by JICA Literacy education for 10,000 adults by JICA Literacy education for 600,000 adults in cooperation with UNESCO (ongoing) 41 vocational training centers (2) Health, Medical Care and Water Vaccination to 47 million people (polio, BCG etc) 59 clinics constructed Equipment to 100 clinics constructed by US 20 water supply vehicles, 1,000 wells constructed (3) Humanitarian Assistance 9,114 tons of wheat and pulses in 2009 Provision of 2,500 shelters and lump sum cash assistance to 45,000 people in 2008 Large scale reintegration project to receive 2 million returnees in Mazar-e-Sharif, Kandahar and Jalalabad : housings, education, health and vocational training (since 2002) 5. Agriculture and Rural Development (1) Agriculture Technical assistance to rice-farmers in Nangarhar 3 Agricultural Experiment Stations Mine-clearing of 200 km2, Anti-landmine education for 1.5 million people Mine-Free Bamiyan Project (26 teams currenty w orking in Bamiyan) (2) Rural Development 2,000 community-based projects across the country : schools, clinics, vocational training centers, bridges, canals etc. Of w hich 87 projects in cooperation w ith PRTs. 1 Japanese liaison officer to the NATO SCR One-Villeage-One-Product (carpets, potatos, dairy products, garics etc) 6. Culture (1)Bamiyan ruins Preservation of Bamiyan ruins in cooperation with UNESCO (2) Istalif Pottery Support to maintain traditional Istalif pottery skills

Japan s New Assistance Package (announced in November,2009) Japan will provide assistance of approximately 80 billion yen urgently needed in Afghanistan. Shifting up from the existing pledge of a total of approximately two billion US dollars, Japan will provide assistance up to an amount in the region of five billion US dollars in about five years from 2009,based on the future situation of Afghanistan. Three main areas of Japan s assistance (1) Support in enhancing Afghanistan s capability to maintain security. Japan will pave the way for the Afghans to take their own security responsibilities by such assistance as supporting the National Police. (2) Assistance for reintegration of grass root level soldiers For reintegration and long term reconciliation with the insurgents, it is important to begin with working on assistance to reintegration of grass root level soldiers. Japan will provide financial assistance to programs such as vocational training and small scale rural development programs for job creation. (3) Assistance for Afghanistan s sustainable and self-reliant development For Afghanistan s sustainable and self-reliant development, Japan will provide assistance in areas such as agriculture and rural development, infrasturucture development (including energy), education, health and other basic human needs based on the Afghanistan s needs.

Breakdown of Japan s Assistance to Afghanistan Total of approximately $2.35 billion (2001.9 2010.4) Humanitarian Assistance Total of $ 393 million Democratic Process, Governance $298 million Budget Support to Afghan Government $ 163 million Media Support $ 26 million Election Support $ 103 million National Census $ 6 million Security Improvement $629 million DDR & DIAG $ 218 million De-mining $ 56 million Counter- Narcotics / Border Management $ 32 million Police Reform $ 319 million Ammunition Management $ 4 million Reconstruction $1033 million Infrastructure $ 300 million Health, Medical Care $ 72 million Education $ 87 million Refugees and IDPs $ 129 million Agriculture, Rural Development $ 155 million Assistance through NGOs $ 99 million JICA Technical Assistance $ 157 million Others $34 million

Assistance throughout Afghanistan Japan s cooperation with NATO-PRTs Border management Road construction Prioritized area of Japanese assistance Mazar-e-sharif (To Uzbekistan) Takhar Mazar-e-sharif Reintegration of refugees and IDPs Construction of city roads National Agricultural Experiment Stations Rural development Literacy training Vocational training Chaghcharan Herat Dispatch of 4 Civilians to Lithuania-led PRT Bamiyan Restoration of Bamiyan ruins Agriculture and Rural development Literacy training Nimruz Chaghcharan Construction of Kabul International Airport Terminal Bamiyan Kandahar (To Pakistan) Kabul Jalalabad Assistance for Stabilization of Border Areas with Pakistan and Iran Mine-clearance, refugees / IDP support, community development, vocational training, food assistance, construction of 62 schools Kabul Kabul International Airport Terminal Building Construction of 48 schools (ongoing) Master plan of Kabul Metropolitan areas Provision of public buses Equipment to Mother and Child Health Care Hospital TV broadcasting facilities Kabul road technology center Anti-TB project Jalalabad JICA rice-farming project Reintegration of refugees and IDPs Kandahar Construction of Kandahar - Herat Road (Ring Road) Reintegration of refugees and IDPs Reintegration of returnees

Political Support Political support to Afghanistan 5 conferences held in Tokyo Tokyo Conference on the reconstruction of Afghanistan (January 2002) This marked the start of reconstruction process, followed by Berlin (2004), London (2006), and Paris (2008) conferences. DDR Conference (2003.2) DIAG Conference (2006.7) DIAG Conference on cooperation between DIAG and Police Reform (2007. 6) JCMB Political Directors meeting (2008.2) International Conference on Reconstruction Assistance to Afghanistan (Tokyo Conference) (January 2002)

Activities of Japanese Civilians in Afghanistan 120 Japanese civilians based in and engaged in assistance of Afghanistan (as of March 2010) Japanese Embassy 30 staff Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) 60 staff 120 Japanese experts dispatched yearly 170 Afghan trainees received yearly Japanese private organizations and NGOs Japanese staff working actively in international organizations Mr. Shigeyuki Hiroki, Japanese Ambassador to Afghanistan, visits the construction site of a female school in Chaghcharan assisted by Japan s grant aid(sept. 2009) JICA expert Private aid workers and NGOs

Political Process Political process Assistance to Bonn Process (2001-2005) 2002 Emergency Loya-Jirga (Jirga : traditional national conference) (Assistance of US$ 2.6 million, dispatch of Japanese an observation team, provision of equipment for TV broadcasting of Loya-Jirga) 2003 Constitution Enactment (US$ 750,000 for holding a hearing from people, dispatch of Japanese experts of constitution and holding seminars. 2004 Voter Registration (assistance of US$ 8.2 million ) 2004 Presidential Election (assistance of US$ 8.8 million, dispatch of a Japanese observation team ) 2005 Parliamentary (lower house) and provincial elections (assistance of US$ 13 million, dispatch of a Japanese observation team ) Assistance to presidential and provincial elections in 2009 (US$ 37 million, dispatch of a Japanese observation team ) People watching TV broadcasting Emergency Loya-Jirga (Photo prov ided by JICA) The Japanese election observation team at lower house and provincial elections in 2005 (Head of the team submits observation report)

Security : DDR DDR : Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration Lead country in DDR together with the UN Assist US$ 100 million to ANBP(UNDP programme) for implementation of DDR DDR of about 60,000 ex-combatants completed in June 2006. 50,000 weapons and 100,000 heavy weapons collected. Vocational training in agriculture, mine-clearance, small business etc Weapons collected by DDR Heavy weapons (Photo prov ided by UNDP) Ceremony on Japanese assistance to DDR (Photo prov ided by UNDP) Reintegration support Vocational training for 550 former soldiers by JICA

Security : DIAG DIAG : Disbandment of Illegal Armed Groups Lead country in DIAG after the completion of DDR 689 illegal armed groups out of 2,000 groups disbanded as of November 2008 100,000 weapons have been brought under GOA control. 85 development projects in districts which complied with DIAG Cooperation with NATO in enhancing stockpile management by ANA Weapons collected through DIAG in Wardak (Photo prov ided by UNDP) Tokyo Conference on DIAG (2006) Establishment of DIAG Unit at Ministry of Interior Kabul 51 development projects In districts which supported DIAG Stockpile management in cooperation with NATO Development project in Kapisa after DIAG (Photo prov ided by UNDP)

Security : Police Reform and Counter-Narcotics Police Reform and Counter-Narcotics Construction of Border Police Center in Nimruz (Afghan-Pakistan-Iran border) (2008) Construction of Border Customs Facilities in Takhar (Afghan-Tajikistan border) (2008) Police training in Japan by Japanese National Police Agency (2008-) Assistance equivalent to salary of all policemen (80,000 people) for 6 month (US$ 124.8 million through LOTFA) (2009) Custom and Border Control in Afghanistan and Central Asia through OSCE (2009) Takhar Nimuruz Border Control projects by Japan Training of Afghan National Police in Japan Police vehicles provided by Japan

Infrastructure : Trunk Road Trunk Road 650 km of roads (Ring Road and other primary roads) implemented or decided 112 km Kabul Kandahar Road constructed by Japanese assistance Mazar-e-Sharif city road constructed by Japanese assistance

Infrastructure : Development of Kabul City Development of Kabul City Construction of Kabul International Airport Terminal Provision of 115 public buses to Kabul City Drawing up of Master Plan of Kabul Metropolitan City Development Kabul International Airport Terminal constructed by Japan Provision of Public Buses to Kabul City JICA experts teaching city mapping

Basic Human Needs : Education Education 650 schools constructed or repaired Training of 10,000 teachers, development of teaching materials by JICA Construction and maintenance of 41 vocational training centers Literacy education training for 10,000 adults by JICA Literacy education for 600,000 adults through UNESCO (ongoing) One of the schools constructed by Japanese assistance Technical training to women teachers by JICA Literacy education assistance (photo prov ided by UNESCO) School constructed by a Japanese NGO (Photo prov ided by JEN)

Basic Human Needs : Health Health, Medical Care and Water Vaccination to total of 47 million people (polio, BCG etc) Construction and maintenance of 59 clinics, provision of equipment to 100 clinics constructed by US 20 water supply vehicles, construction of 1,000 wells JICA Japanese expert working on mother and child health care Anti-Tuberculosis Center in Kabul constructed by Japan A well built by Japanese NGO (Photo prov ided by JEN) Water Supply vehicle in Kabul

Basic Human Needs : Humanitarian Assistance Humanitarian Assistance Food assistance (WFP) 13,000 ton of wheat and pulse for 260,000 people in 2008 Refugees and IDP assistance (UNHCR, IOM) Provision of 2,500 shelters (about 15,000 beneficiaries) Livelihood assistance for 45,000 people in 2008 Large scale reintegration project to receive 2 million returnees in Mazar-e-Sharif, Kandahar and Jalalabad in all fields of housing, education, health and vocational training (since 2002) Food assistance by Japan Shelters for returnees in Nangarhar (Photo prov ided by FAO) Capet weaving training to returnees from Iran in Herat (Photo prov ided by FAO)

Agriculture Agriculture Rice farming project in Nangarhar by JICA National Agricultural Experiment Stations (Kabul, Balkh, Bamiyan) Wheat seeds (2,000 people), young plant of fruits (680 people), greenhouse (643 people) De-mining of 200 km2 and anti-landmine education for 1.5 million people Mine Free Bamiyan Project (26 teams currently working in Bamiyan) JICA Japanese expert instructing rice farming Agricultural Experiment Stations In Kabul renovated by JICA Balkh Kabul Farming project in Mazar-e-Sharif (Photo prov ided by FAO) Bamiyan FATA De-Mining in Palwan by Japanese NGO Nangarhar Assist agriculture in 4 Provinces De-Mining in Parwan by Jpanese NGO

Rural Development Rural Development Assisted 2,000 community-based projects 748 grassroots projects across the country (schools, clinics, vocational training centers, bridges, canals, small roads etc) 1,000 project in villages (NSP) and 300 projects in districts (NABDP) etc One-Villeage-One Products (business chain development of production, processing, distribution and sale) Balkh : carpet, edible oil Bamiyan : dairy products, garic, edible oil Nangarhar : carpet, potatos Bamiyan FATA Balkh Nangarhar A school constructed in Ghor Provision of cows in Mazar-e-sharif (for 600 people) Women assistance program to make dry fruits

Cooperation with NATO/PRT Cooperation with NATO/PRT 87 grassroots projects in cooperation with 14 PRTs (Primary education, vocational training, medical and health care) Appointment of a Japanese Liaison officer to the NATO Senior Civilian Representative in Kabul for effective implementation of projects Four MOFA Staff are dispatched to the Lithuanian led-chaghcharan PRT 14 projects with Mazar-e-Sharif PRT 5 projects with Pol-e - Khomri PRT 3 projects with Fayzabad PRT Opening ceremony of the Female Literacy and Vocational Training Project in Chaghcharan in Sep. 2007 3 projects with Herat PRT 2 project with Meymana PRT 1 project with Qala-e-Naw PRT 35 projects with Chaghcharan PRT 2 projects with Ghazni PRT 1 project with Bagram PRT 2 projects with Panjshir PRT 1 project with Nurestan PRT 7 projects with Asadabad PRT 10 projects with Mehter lam PRT 1 project with Gardez PRT

Culture Culture Preservation of Bamiyan ruins and capacity-building in cooperation with UNESCO (The Japanese Funds in trust for the Preservation of World Cultural Heritage) Support to maintain traditional Istalif pottery skills Japanese experts working on the preservation of Bamiyan ruins (Photo prov ided by National Rsearch Institute for Cultural Proparties, Tokyo) Afghan potters visiting Japanese pottery towns (Photo prov ided by Japan Foundation (left and upper right), Mr. Kosaku Maeda, the honorary prof essor of Wako University (left)))