The Business of War
 
  
 
WHAT’S NEW ON CORPWATCH
    
29/4/06
Corpwatch - Afghanistan, Inc.: New Report and launch party
 


Date: 29 April 2006 00:44:18 BDT

To: warprofits@lists.corpwatch.org

Afghanistan, Inc.: A CorpWatch Investigative Report

Contractors in Afghanistan are making big money for bad work

A highway that begins crumbling before it is finished. A school with a collapsed roof. A clinic with faulty plumbing. A farmers' cooperative that farmers can't use. Afghan police and military that, after training, are incapable of providing the most basic security. And contractors walking away with millions of dollars in aid money for the work. The Bush Administration touts the reconstruction effort in Afghanistan as a success story. Perhaps, in comparison to the violence-plagued efforts in Iraq and the incompetence-riddled efforts on the American Gulf Coast, everything is relative. Our new report 'Afghanistan, Inc.,' details the bungled reconstruction effort in Afghanistan.

**If you are in San Francisco on Tuesday, May 2nd, you can meet investigative journalists Fariba Nawa and Pratap Chatterjee, for a night of drinking, music and conversation at 111 Minna Gallery in San Francisco. This event will launch the release of this new report, and will include reportbacks from Afghanistan and Iraq.**

For more information about the event:
www.corpwatch.org/article.php?id=13518

MORE ON THE REPORT:

Massive open-ended contracts have been granted without competitive bidding or with limited competition to many of the same politically connected corporations which are doing similar work in Iraq: Kellogg, Brown & Root (a subsidiary of Halliburton), DynCorp, Blackwater, The Louis Berger Group, The Rendon Group and many more. Engineers, consultants, and mercenaries make as much as $1,000 a day, while the Afghans they employ make $5 per day.

These companies are pocketing millions, and leaving behind a people increasingly frustrated and angry with the results.

Fariba Nawa, an Afghan-American who returned to her native country to examine the progress of reconstruction, uncovers some examples of where the money has (and hasn't) gone, how the system of international aid works (and doesn't), and what it is really like in the villages and cities where outsiders are rebuilding the war-torn countryside.

In Afghanistan, Inc., you'll get an inside look at a system gone out of control, with little accountability and plenty of opportunity for graft and abuse. It isn't a story you want to read; it's a story you must read.

THE FULL REPORT WILL BE PUBLISHED ON TUESDAY, MAY 2nd.

DONATE TO CORPWATCH!

Support CorpWatch’s work to hold corporations accountable on human rights, labor rights and environmental justice issues through education and activism.

Help us bring the critical information and resources that tens of thousands of you access every month by making a contribution to CorpWatch.
www.corpwatch.org/donate

lists.corpwatch.org/lists/info/warprofits

    
Back to Main Index >> Halliburton Index