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Afghanistan Corruption Crippling Society, Bribes Equal Almost A Quarter Of GDP (VIDEO)

First Posted: 03/22/10 06:12 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 04:15 PM ET

SYLVIA HUI, Associated Press Writer

LONDON - Half of all Afghan adults paid at least one bribe to a public official over the course of a year to cut through red tape or get help with poor service, the U.N. said Tuesday in a report that documents the extraordinary depth of corruption in Afghanistan.

Afghans paid nearly $2.5 billion (euro1.7 billion) in bribes -- worth almost a quarter of the country's GDP -- in the 12-month period ending last autumn.

The average bribe cost $160 -- a hefty sum in a country with a per capita income of nearly $500, according to the report, based on interviews with thousands of people across Afghanistan.

Most of those surveyed said they could not expect a single public service without paying favors. Many felt it was "normal" to pay extra for services, better treatment or avoiding fines.

READ MORE FROM RETHINK AFGHANISTAN


Bribes were requested and taken by politicians, prosecutors, tax officers -- anyone with even the most modest level of power to yield, from the humblest clerk at the office in charge of driver's licenses to, by many accounts, the highest levels of government.

Most of the payments went to police, judges and other local officials, but Afghans were also asked to bribe teachers in public schools and doctors and nurses in government hospitals.

The report by the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime comes as the U.S. and its partners develop plans to bolster President Hamid Karzai so he can restore public trust and turn back a resurgent Taliban. American officials have long maintained that public outrage over government corruption and inefficiency has driven many Afghans into the ranks of the insurgents.

"The Afghans say they don't have anybody to go to," the program's executive director, Antonio Maria Costa, said as he presented the report in London. "Law enforcement officials are by and large the main culprits."

Karzai has acknowledged that corruption exists, but says the problem has been exaggerated abroad and occurs in many countries. He has maintained that the international community in Afghanistan is also guilty of corruption, wasting aid money on overpriced consultants and kickbacks.

The issue took on new urgency after the Aug. 20 presidential election, which U.N.-backed auditors said was marred by widespread fraud in favor of Karzai. He was proclaimed president two months later after his last challenger dropped out of a planned runoff, claiming the vote would not be fair.

The U.S. and other countries contributing troops and aid are meeting in London next week for a major conference aimed at increasing support for the Afghan government as the U.S. and its NATO allies ramp up their military commitment. The report seemed timed to influence the policymakers -- and to remind them of the importance of addressing the problem.

One respondent reported that bribe collectors often troll outside government buildings, approaching people needing a passport or a drivers license. They promise a fast fix with the men behind the desks, producing results in days for governmental processes that normally take weeks.

"He takes money and of course he will distribute it with those who are sitting inside offices," the report quoted the unidentified man as saying.

The report was based on interviews conducted last year from August to October with 7,600 Afghans in 12 provincial towns -- or about one third of the provincial capitals -- and more than 1,600 villages around Afghanistan.

The U.N. said one in two adults reported paying at least one kickback to a public official. More than half the time, the officials made explicit demands for cash. On other occasions, they asked more subtly for alternate types of payment like livestock.

On average, victims of bribery reported having to pay almost five favors a year. The report estimated from these figures that in total, Afghans paid $2.49 billion in bribes over the 12-month period, or 23 percent of the national GDP of $10.6 billion.

Although the average bribe worked out to $160, an entrepreneur who can pay $100,000 for a license to open a business can skew the results of 1,000 people paying $10 each to get a birth certificate.

Only 9 percent of the urban population believed corruption was worth reporting to authorities -- probably because the authorities themselves are corrupt.

Costa said the entrenched corruption was fueling the lucrative drug industry.

"Drugs and bribes are the two largest income-generators in Afghanistan," he said. The country's opium trade last year was worth an estimated $2.8 billion.

Costa said the lack of trust in public officials was prompting Afghans to look for alternate providers of security and welfare. The weakening of traditional justice administered by village elders could mean that more people will be drawn to violent forms of retribution such as Sharia religious law, he said.

Karzai's government has tried to tackle corruption in the past -- with little success. An initial anti-corruption body was disbanded after it became known that its head had been convicted and imprisoned on drug charges in the United States. Another office was launched last year with promises of high-level trials, but Afghans continue to list government corruption as one of their biggest problems.

The non-governmental organization Transparency International last year ranked Afghanistan 176th out of 180 countries in its annual poll that assesses the degree to which corruption is perceived to exist among public officials and politicians. The only countries ranked lower were Haiti, Iraq, Myanmar and Somalia.

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SYLVIA HUI, Associated Press Writer LONDON - Half of all Afghan adults paid at least one bribe to a public official over the course of a year to cut through red tape or get help with poor service, th...
SYLVIA HUI, Associated Press Writer LONDON - Half of all Afghan adults paid at least one bribe to a public official over the course of a year to cut through red tape or get help with poor service, th...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sabrina1
01:46 PM on 01/20/2010
Just curious; wonder how the amount of lobbyists's money (bribery) spent in the US would pair up with our GDP.
12:53 PM on 01/20/2010
Look in you own damn backyard before criticizing others! Look at the Washington corruption. Can't even get Health Care Reform or Bank Regulations passed because of Lobbyists in Washington and their "Bribery" money.

If US Financial Institutions are not regulated they will lose the confidence of the International community & the USD will be replaced by the Euro or another currency.

WAKE UP! America.

And, the Party of NO & Democrats lining their pockets with cash will allow that to happen.
12:44 PM on 01/20/2010
Nobody turns down a chance to grab the Bigbagamoney.........even you have your price.
01:25 PM on 01/20/2010
You couldn't be further from the truth.

Some of us were born with things like moral fiber and a backbone.
01:28 PM on 01/20/2010
There are always exception to the rule. Some of us act with dignity even if nobody is watching.
12:37 PM on 01/20/2010
Why should I? I am watching daily how corruption is crippling the US society
12:13 PM on 01/20/2010
When are we going to wake up as a nation? Does anyone actually believe that we are spending all this money in Afghanistan in order to rebuild the nation? Or, are we spending the money so that we can capture Osama bin Laden? Or are we in Afghanistan in order to destroy the Taliban? Which is it? Does anybody know?

This is the fleecing of America by the American elite. Pure and simple. Nobody can give us an accounting on how much has been spent in Afghanistan and on what? We talk transparency but, what the hell does it mean? The American elite are stealing from us with the help of the U.S.government. The fat cat are getting richer while the nation is suffering from major unemployment, essentially the nation is in shock, just like Afghanistan is in shock. According to the money interest, the best time to loot the people is when they are in shock. When are we going to wake up?
12:10 PM on 01/20/2010
Thank you Derrick, the shortened video they show here doesn't even begin to describe the terror of what we are doing to these poor people. This link is worth posting again to be certain people watch it, then try to say we shouldn't get the f out of there.

http://rethinkafghanistan.com/cc.php

Also, can we revoke the peace prize for sending more troops over there and just causing more of this kind of suffering?
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yakmeat
Nearly all of us are both makers and takers.
11:41 AM on 01/20/2010
"Most of those surveyed said they could not expect a single public service without paying favors. Many felt it was "normal" to pay extra for services, better treatment or avoiding fines."

Funny that... here in America, we call it "privatization".
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Pleiadian
11:41 AM on 01/20/2010
AFGHANISTAN CORRUPTION!?!?!?! How about U.S. corruption crippling our society as well as the rest of the worlds? We are trying to fix someone elses house and WE can't even fix our own house. Who are we to wave our fingers at the world when we are the leaders in corruption and the rest of the world knows it except Americans? Yet we bicker back and forth with each other while these politicians continue running their game on us and the world.

Wake up before these people take you and your family and their future children over a cliff. There is a better world and you can all have it if you want it.

You want to know what is going on then start with this link.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3txeN8BHspQ

Peace, Light, & Love
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kyeshinka
11:09 AM on 01/20/2010
A quarter!? That's nothing. In Russia it's at least a third.
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09:54 AM on 01/20/2010
someone should buy her, adopt her and give her a chance at a decent life.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Derrick Crowe
10:13 AM on 01/20/2010
You can't. She's dead.
http://rethinkafghanistan.com/cc.php
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
HockeyMom
I was here before SP and will be long after her.
11:13 AM on 01/20/2010
Oh my that was terrible. What are we doing?

51% of our GNP now goes to the war machine and that does not include what the CIA spends. What oh What are we doing?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
msjimmied
12:10 PM on 01/20/2010
That just broke my heart...poor little kid didn't have a chance.
10:39 PM on 01/20/2010
is there any way to do that? i still haven't gotten that picture out of my head nor the churning in my stomach as he nudges her saying no one wants her..
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Fred Hood
United we win divided we lose
09:34 AM on 01/20/2010
our people will fit right in
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
oxygen
love is like oxygen
09:13 AM on 01/20/2010
what is the pay of an american soldier compared to that of an afghan soldier and does anyone think this might make a difference in dedication etc etc

it's basically a dishonest and ignorant idea that you can have people working along each other doing the same thing and one group gets big bucks and the other peanuts - because "we're americans and here to help you"

how much does an aid worker there get compared to an american over there doing aid work, how about the police in Afghanistan, how about the government workers there - do they get to give themselves all the best like in the u.s.?
12:40 PM on 01/20/2010
A wrong question - what is the pay of Blackwater mercenaries?