
  SEMINAR ON
 
  "SECURITY AND DEVELOPMENT:  THE CASE OF AFGHANISTAN"
    Brussels, 7 February 2007
    
    Address by Mr Karel DE GUCHT,
    Minister of Foreign Affairs of Belgium
  
Excellencies,
      Ladies and Gentlemen, 
      
      Allow me, first of all, to welcome you at this seminar on security and  development; the case of Afghanistan,  which takes place at the right time. About a year ago, at the London conference, the Government of  Afghanistan and the international community launched the Afghanistan  Compact.  It set out goals and benchmarks for development in Afghanistan,  for the next 10 years.    
      
      Much has been achieved over the past 12 months. Parliamentary committees have  been established.  Provincial councils have started meeting in all 34  provinces.  Reconstruction is set in motion. More than 7 million Afghan  boys and girls are now able to go to school. Provincial Reconstruction Teams  have provided the framework for programs to improve security, infrastructure  and development. 
      
      However, great challenges still lay ahead.  Allow me to outline seven  points which urgently need to be addressed and which will be taken up in the  course of this seminar, I presume. 
      
      First, ISAF, the stabilization force led by NATO, should continue its operation  to provide security and stability, including in the  most remote areas.  Last autumn, ISAF's  territorial scope has been extended to the entire territory of Afghanistan.   NATO will continue to take up its responsibility and so will Belgium.   But we should do so more and more together with the Afghan armed forces (ANA).  A prerequisite is that the size of the Army increases.  ISAF¿s mission includes Security Sector Reform and training  and equipping the ANA.  This is of key importance.  ISAF cannot and  should not stay for decades. Together we will have to work out an exit strategy  for ISAF.  
      
      Over 300 Belgian military are currently deployed in Afghanistan.  Most of them are  providing security at Kabul   Airport. Some are  deployed in the German-led PRT in Kunduz in the  North. We also provide transport for the ISAF mission.  It is our  intention to take the command of ISAF at Kabul Airport  in October. Our task will also include training of Afghan units 
      
      Second, to bring security and stability to the Afghan  people, you will also need law and order, and thus a good functioning police  and judiciary system.  That why we are also stepping up efforts on this  front.  In the course of 2007, the EU will deploy a civil crisis  management mission to Afghanistan.  Its main task will be to help develop of a self-sustainable National Police  force. Also, the European Commission, active in Afghanistan for several years, is  the main contributor to the Law and Order Trust Fund for Afghanistan (LOTFA).  It will further increase its efforts to reform the judiciary system. 
      
      Third, reconstruction and development need to reach the rural areas and the day  to day live of the Afghan people.  We can only win the hearts and minds of  the people if we can improve their lives, by building farm-to-market roads,  providing electricity to remote villages, building schools and hospitals, and  constructing irrigation systems. Infrastructure projects will have to meet the  most urgent needs of the rural population, in particular in the East and the  South. Too little has occurred in these areas because of security  concerns.  Paradoxically, the areas most at risk to the Taliban receive  little development assistance.  Civil reconstruction efforts need to be  enhanced. NATO can not do this.  Others can.  
      
      Fourth, we should improve the coordination between all actors, also in the  field.   That has proven to be a challenge because of the many  aspects and actors involved.  The most appropriate organization to do that  is the United Nations, which, I believe, should be more active in Afghanistan.   That¿s why  I am happy to learn that UNAMA is opening five additional regional offices in Afghanistan  this year and more next year. 
      
      Fifth, it is extremely preoccupying that drug production in Afghanistan has  increased substantially, despite efforts to fight it.  Poppy culture  offers easy money that can be   used in financing terrorist activities. It increases  dependence of farmers, reluctant to grow other crops or engage in other  economic activity.  We should device a better strategy and redouble our  efforts.  It can not be that we are stabilizing Afghanistan for the drug production  to flourish. The fight against drugs in Pakistan  and Turkey  has shown that it is a war that can be won. 
      Sixth, it is the Afghan Government in the first place that is responsible for  stability and development of the country and for the implementation of the  Afghan Compact objectives, of course with the help of the International  Community.  It urgently needs to extend its authority to the more remote  provinces, to tackle corruption and wage the war on drugs.  There can be  no stability and development without governance - good governance.  
      
      Seventh, there is also a regional factor. Three million Afghan refugees live in  camps in Pakistan and one  million in Iran.  These camps are breeding grounds for extremist movements. Moreover relations  between Kabul and Islamabad are rather stained, when  cooperation is in both countries¿ interest.  Afghanistan also needs to improve cooperation  with its neighbors to the North: Iran, Tajikistan  and Kyrgyzstan.  A major part of the narcotics trade makes use of routes through these  countries.  
      
      Excellencies, 
      Ladies and Gentlemen, 
      
      There can be no meaningful development without security and stability.   But equally true, sustainable security and stability is dependent on  development and real improvement of people¿s  lives.   
      
      We will only be able to make a decisive difference when we manage to make  progress together and on all fronts, in a substantial and simultaneous way:  create security and stability, build law and order throughout the country,  address the people¿s urgent needs by reconstruction  and development programs and fight corruption and narcotics. That is our common  task, our common challenge.  
      
      The international community will continue to support the Afghan Government in  its responsibility to build an Afghanistan  that guarantees the prospect of a life in peace and prosperity to its citizens. 
      
      Thank you for attention.