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Afghans increasingly pessimistic: survey
Agence France Presse - October 28, 2008
Afghans are increasingly pessimistic about their country, with security, unemployment and high prices dominating concerns, according to a new survey.
The proportion of people who said they were more prosperous today than under the 1996-2001 Taliban government had also "decreased significantly", said The Asia Foundation poll.
The drop was from 54 per cent in 2006 – five years after the ouster of the hardline Taliban government – to 36 per cent this year, the US-based foundation said. "There is a clear trend towards greater pessimism over the last two years," the survey summary said.
Thirty-eight per cent of respondents this year said Afghanistan was moving in the right direction, compared with 42 per cent in 2007 and 44 per cent in 2006. The number saying it was moving in the wrong direction was up to 32 per cent, from 24 per cent in 2007 and 21 per cent in 2006.
Satisfaction with government at all levels has fallen since 2007 with the administration seen as doing best in the provision of education and health care and worst in the economic arena and in combating corruption, the Foundation said.
Respondents also continued to express concern about not having basic services, notably electricity.
Afghanistan's infrastructure was destroyed during three decades of war that started with the Soviet invasion of 1979. Millions of dollars in aid has seen some development but many Afghans complain there has been little improvement.
Adding to pressures on the country – one of the poorest in the world – has been the worldwide economic upheaval.
"In 2008, economic issues have gained prominence as major national problems compared to 2007, particularly the issue of high prices related to the global crisis in food prices, unemployment, and poor economy," the survey said.
It noted that public confidence in the capacity of the Afghan army and police – being trained and equipped by their international counterparts – appeared to be improving.
But the percentage of respondents who said there was freedom of expression in their area had decreased from 46 per cent in 2006 to 40 per cent this year, with fear for personal safety cited as the main reason.
The country had been through increasingly difficult times over the past year, The Asia Foundation said.
While there had been some gains in improving basic amenities and services and in reconstruction, conflict linked to a Taliban-led insurgency had resulted in significantly higher civilian and military casualties, it said.
"Food shortages in many regions became severe, with several million Afghans facing near-starvation this coming winter; and inflation and unemployment continued to rise," the report's authors said.
The biggest problems identified this year by the survey's 6,593 respondents were security (36 per cent compared with 46 per cent in 2007) and economic issues including unemployment (31 per cent versus 27 per cent previously).
High prices (22 per cent: two per cent in 2007), poor economy (17 per cent against 19 per cent) and corruption (14 per cent: 16 per cent last year) were other top concerns.
The Asia Foundation is a non-governmental organisation with 17 offices in Asia and its headquarters in the United States. Its declared aims are to help improve governance, law, development and other issues.
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