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-
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- 2008-06-19
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- Referral to associated committees announced in Parliament
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- Committee referral announced in Parliament, 1st reading/single reading
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- 2008-06-03
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- Foreign Affairs (Associated committee)
- rapporteur
-
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- PPE-DE
- name
- MLADENOV Nickolay
-
- body
- EP
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- False
- committee
- BUDG
- date
- 2008-06-18
- committee_full
- Budgets
- rapporteur
-
- group
- PPE-DE
- name
- ANDRIKIENĖ Laima Liucija
-
- body
- EP
- responsible
- True
- committee
- CONT
- date
- 2008-03-26
- committee_full
- Budgetary Control (Associated committee)
- rapporteur
-
- group
- PPE-DE
- name
- MATHIEU Véronique
-
- body
- EP
- responsible
- False
- committee
- DEVE
- date
- 2008-06-25
- committee_full
- Development (Associated committee)
- rapporteur
-
- group
- PPE-DE
- name
- ŐRY Csaba
-
- date
- 2008-09-19
- docs
-
- url
- http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=COMPARL&mode=XML&language=EN&reference=PE412.305
- type
- Committee draft report
- title
- PE412.305
- body
- EP
- type
- Committee draft report
-
- date
- 2008-12-02
- text
The Committee on Budgetary
Control unanimously adopted the own-initiative report drafted by
Véronique MATHIEU (EPP-ED, FR) on budgetary control
of EU funds in Afghanistan. It recalls that through different
international conferences, the EU and the international community
committed themselves to granting a total in excess of EUR 8 billion
in international aid to Afghanistan. The report recalls that the
Commission (between 2002 and 2007) granted aid totalling EUR 1.4
billion (including EUR 174 million in humanitarian aid). This aid
consists of both direct and indirect aid, and that between 2002 and
2007 direct Community aid, which accounts for 70% of the total (EUR
970 million), was activated by the Commission's services in the
form of funding conventions with the Afghan state, contracts with
providers of services, supplies or works and subsidy agreements
with international organisations or European or local NGOs, while
indirect aid is managed essentially by the UN and the World Bank
(13% and 17% respectively of total funds).
Utilisation of EU funds - state of
play: the report highlights two major
problems for the distribution of international aid: 1)
Afghanistan's low absorption capacity in economic and
administrative terms; 2) deficient coordination between
donors and the Afghan authorities. MEPs consider that the lack of
coordination is a reflection of weak governmental structures and
the absence of a proper strategy at government level.
MEPs take the view that this lack of coordination
tends to encourage corruption and has proved detrimental to
national reconstruction. In addition, MEPs add that the multiplicity of donors and their desire
to affirm their visibility can often lead to isolated national
strategies or to overlapping between different national ministries.
This lack of coordination tends to encourage corruption and has
proved detrimental to national reconstruction. They also express
their concern about the poor quality of the administration of
assistance funds by the Afghan central administration and the lack
of transparency in the management of this assistance. They consider
it to be of prime importance that the MIP 2010-2013 take into due
consideration the concrete results of the fight against corruption
and adapt EU assistance accordingly. It is highlighted that the
Afghan Government's priorities must include the rule of law and the
fight against corruption and drug trafficking and MEPs consider
that without proper governance there can be no lasting progress in
Afghanistan.
MEPs considers in particular that since the fall of
the Taliban regime, there have been promising developments in the
areas of health, education and infrastructure (especially roads),
infant mortality has fallen substantially (from 22% in 2001 to
12,9% in 2006), more Afghans have direct access to basic health
care (65% in 2006 as against 9% in 2001), and there are the first
signs of positive development in terms of education and initiatives
for gender equality.
Reinforcing controls:
MEPs call on the Commission to draw on a sufficient range of legal
resources to protect the Union's financial interests in
Afghanistan. They note that the European Court of Auditors, in
application of the same provisions, can also carry out checks with
the international organisations concerned. The report recalls that
the UN agencies and the World Bank have at their disposal elaborate
governance provisions comparable to those of the Commission, with
specialised financial management entities, internal audits,
inspections, external audits, market monitoring and means of
combating fraud and irregularities. MEPs stress the need for
stronger monitoring of the implementation of EU development
cooperation and call for the UN and other international
organisations which manage EU funds to cooperate fully with the ECA
and the European Anti-Fraud Office (OLAF), as well as with the UN
Joint Inspection Unit. They stress the need to improve donor
coordination in Afghanistan under the leadership of the United
Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan, and believe that the
Commission should strengthen assistance coordination among Member
States in order to improve effectiveness and to increase the
visibility of EU support.
In addition, MEPs make a series of recommendations to
improve the quality and the efficiency of aid. The main
recommendations can be summarised as follows:
- Coordination and visibility of international
aid: MEPs believe that further
efforts are required as regards international assistance with a
view to supporting implementation of the Afghan national
development strategy and phasing-in improved coordination and more
efficient methods in the activation of the development priorities
as defined by the Afghans themselves. The Commission should tackle
the worrying coordination shortcomings regarding EU financial
assistance to Afghanistan not only between Member States and it but
also amongst Member States. The Commission should develop a
strategy involving donors and the Afghan authorities designed to
improve coordination and communication between them. The report
also considers it essential, given the importance of Community aid
in the context of international aid as a whole, to boost the
visibility of the Union's actions both locally and in the eyes of
the European public. MEPs call on the Commission to submit a report
analysing the extent to which gender equality has been taken into
account to date in the programming of the overall financial
assistance allocated by the Union.
- Priority areas for aid:
MEPs encourage the Commission, in cooperation with the Member
States, to intervene more forcefully in order to tackle the key
problems affecting daily life, health, security and access to
public services and basic education. They underline the need to
focus on reform of the criminal justice system, including the
police, detention practices and the judiciary, ensuring respect for
human rights, particularly those of women and children, and the
fight against poverty, including rural development and tackling the
overriding problem of opium production. Two particular challenges
should urgently be addressed, namely the development of agriculture
and the development of policies and programmes addressing the major
social and health problems induced by drug addiction. MEPs call on
its Committee on Budgetary Control to include an assessment of the
extent to which funding for the EU Police Mission in Afghanistan
has been correctly and effectively used.
- Control of EU funds:
MEPs expect the Commission to step up its controls on the
effectiveness of the management of EU financial aid and to submit
an annual report on the issue. They insist that all information on
cases of fraud or severe irregularities having an impact on EU
funds must be forwarded as a matter of urgency to OLAF. MEPs
believe that deteriorating security is causing severe problems for
staff at the Commission delegation in Kabul while also increasing
the administrative costs of implementing Commission-supported
projects. The Commission is therefore asked to increase the
delegation's staffing level by recruiting more and better-qualified
employees capable of carrying out all necessary monitoring, audits
and controls in the light of the circumstances in
Afghanistan.
- Aid to the Afghan administration for
capacity-building: MEPs believe that it is essential to reinforce actions and
programmes for good governance and effective administration in
Afghanistan, as well as to fight corruption in all its forms. They
call on the international community to insist on higher standards
of transparency from the Afghan Government in the allocation of
fiscal resources to the provinces, districts and local authorities.
The report encourages all initiatives aimed at building closer
links between its interparliamentary delegations and the two
chambers of the Afghan parliament (the Wolesi Jirga and the
Meshrano Jirga) in the interests of promoting good governance at
parliamentary level. The need to prioritise support for political
party development, issue-based caucuses within the National
Assembly, civil society and the media is stressed. MEPs
believe that the Commission needs to
increase resources for combating drug trafficking, and recommend
that the donor community make all efforts to ensure that the
introduction of substitute crops offers producers sufficient income
for them to give up poppy cultivation on a permanent
basis.
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- rapporteur
-
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- PPE-DE
- name
- MLADENOV Nickolay
-
- body
- EP
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- committee
- BUDG
- date
- 2008-06-18
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- Budgets
- rapporteur
-
- group
- PPE-DE
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- ANDRIKIENĖ Laima Liucija
-
- body
- EP
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- committee
- CONT
- date
- 2008-03-26
- committee_full
- Budgetary Control (Associated committee)
- rapporteur
-
- group
- PPE-DE
- name
- MATHIEU Véronique
-
- body
- EP
- responsible
- False
- committee
- DEVE
- date
- 2008-06-25
- committee_full
- Development (Associated committee)
- rapporteur
-
- group
- PPE-DE
- name
- ŐRY Csaba
- type
- Vote in committee, 1st reading/single reading
-
- date
- 2008-12-09
- docs
-
- url
- http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=REPORT&mode=XML&reference=A6-2008-0488&language=EN
- type
- Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading
- title
- A6-0488/2008
- body
- type
- Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading
-
- date
- 2008-12-09
- docs
-
- url
- http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=REPORT&mode=XML&reference=A6-2008-0488&language=EN
- type
- Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading
- title
- A6-0488/2008
- body
- EP
- type
- Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading
-
- date
- 2009-01-15
- docs
-
- url
- http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=TA&language=EN&reference=P6-TA-2009-0023
- text
The European Parliament adopted, by 550 votes to 5
with 25 abstentions, a resolution on budgetary control of EU funds
in Afghanistan.
The own-initiative report had been tabled for
consideration in plenary by Véronique MATHIEU
(EPP-ED, FR).
Parliament recalls that through different
international conferences, the EU and the international community
committed themselves to granting a total in excess of EUR 8 billion
in international aid to Afghanistan. The resolution recalls that
the Commission (between 2002 and 2007) granted aid totalling EUR
1.4 billion (including EUR 174 million in humanitarian aid). This
aid consists of both direct and indirect aid, and that between 2002
and 2007 direct Community aid, which accounts for 70% of the total
(EUR 970 million), was activated by the Commission's services in
the form of funding conventions with the Afghan state, contracts
with providers of services, supplies or works and subsidy
agreements with international organisations or European or local
NGOs, while indirect aid is managed essentially by the UN and the
World Bank (13% and 17% respectively of total funds).
Utilisation of EU funds - state of
play: the resolution highlights two
major problems for the distribution of international aid: 1)
Afghanistan's low absorption capacity in economic and
administrative terms; 2) deficient coordination between
donors and the Afghan authorities. MEPs consider that the lack of
coordination is a reflection of weak governmental structures and
the absence of a proper strategy at government level.
MEPs take the view that this lack of
coordination tends to encourage corruption and has proved
detrimental to national reconstruction. In addition, MEPs add that
the multiplicity of donors and their desire to affirm their
visibility can often lead to isolated national strategies or to
overlapping between different national ministries. They also
express their concern about the poor quality of the administration
of assistance funds by the Afghan central administration and the
lack of transparency in the management of this
assistance.
They consider it to be of prime importance that the
MIP 2010-2013 take into due consideration the concrete results of
the fight against corruption and adapt EU assistance accordingly.
It is highlighted that the Afghan Government's priorities must
include the rule of law and the fight against corruption and
drug trafficking and MEPs consider that without proper governance
there can be no lasting progress in Afghanistan.
MEPs considers in particular that since the fall of
the Taliban regime, there have been promising developments in the
areas of health, education and infrastructure (especially roads),
infant mortality has fallen substantially (from 22% in 2001 to
12.9% in 2006), and there are the first signs of positive
development in terms of education and initiatives for gender
equality.
Reinforcing controls:
Parliament calls on the Commission to draw on a sufficient range of
legal resources to protect the Union's financial interests in
Afghanistan. It notes that the European Court of Auditors, in
application of the same provisions, can also carry out checks with
the international organisations concerned. MEPs stress the need for
stronger monitoring of the implementation of EU development
cooperation and call for the UN and other international
organisations which manage EU funds to cooperate fully with the ECA
and the European Anti-Fraud Office (OLAF), as well as with the UN
Joint Inspection Unit. They stress the need to improve donor
coordination in Afghanistan under the leadership of the United
Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan, and believe that the
Commission should strengthen assistance coordination among Member
States in order to improve effectiveness and to increase the
visibility of EU support.
In addition, Parliament makes a series of
recommendations to improve the quality and the efficiency of aid.
The main recommendations can be summarised as
follows:
- Coordination and visibility of international
aid: MEPs believe that further
efforts are required as regards international assistance. The
Commission should tackle the worrying coordination shortcomings
regarding EU financial assistance to Afghanistan not only between
Member States and it but also amongst Member States. The Commission
should develop a strategy involving donors and the Afghan
authorities designed to improve coordination and communication
between them. The report also considers it essential to boost the
visibility of the Union's actions both locally and in the eyes of
the European public. MEPs call on the Commission to submit a report
analysing the extent to which gender equality has been taken into
account to date in the programming of the overall financial
assistance allocated by the Union.
- Priority areas for aid:
Parliament encourages the Commission, in cooperation with the
Member States, to intervene more forcefully in order to tackle the
key problems affecting daily life, health, security and access to
public services and basic education. It underlines the need to
focus on reform of the criminal justice system, including the
police, detention practices and the judiciary, ensuring respect for
human rights, particularly those of women and children, and the
fight against poverty, including rural development and tackling the
overriding problem of opium production. Two particular challenges
should urgently be addressed, namely the development of agriculture
and the development of policies and programmes addressing the major
social and health problems induced by drug addiction. MEPs call on
its Committee on Budgetary Control to include an assessment of the
extent to which funding for the EU Police Mission in Afghanistan
has been correctly and effectively used.
- Control of EU funds:
MEPs expect the Commission to step up its controls on the
effectiveness of the management of EU financial aid and to submit
an annual report on the issue. They insist that all information on
cases of fraud or severe irregularities having an impact on EU
funds must be forwarded as a matter of urgency to OLAF.
- Humanitarian protection:
MEPs believe that deteriorating security is causing severe problems
for staff at the Commission delegation in Kabul while also
increasing the administrative costs of implementing
Commission-supported projects. The Commission is therefore asked to
increase the delegation's staffing level by recruiting more and
better-qualified employees capable of carrying out all necessary
monitoring, audits and controls in the light of the circumstances
in Afghanistan.
- Aid to the Afghan administration for
capacity-building: MEPs believe that
it is essential to reinforce actions and programmes for good
governance and effective administration in Afghanistan, as well as
to fight corruption in all its forms. They call on the
international community to insist on higher standards of
transparency from the Afghan Government in the allocation of fiscal
resources to the provinces, districts and local authorities. The
resolution encourages all initiatives aimed at building closer
links between its interparliamentary delegations and the two
chambers of the Afghan parliament (the Wolesi Jirga and the
Meshrano Jirga) in the interests of promoting good governance at
parliamentary level. The need to prioritise support for political
party development, issue-based caucuses within the National
Assembly, civil society and the media is stressed. MEPs believe
that the Commission needs to increase resources for combating drug
trafficking, and recommend that the donor community make all
efforts to ensure that the introduction of substitute crops offers
producers sufficient income for them to give up poppy cultivation
on a permanent basis which the Parliament has already emphasised in
a number of previous resolutions.
- type
- Decision by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading
- title
- T6-0023/2009
-
- url
- http://www.europarl.europa.eu/oeil/popups/sda.do?id=16485&l=en
- type
- Results of vote in Parliament
- title
- Results of vote in Parliament
- body
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- type
- Text adopted by Parliament, single reading
-
- date
- 2009-01-15
- docs
-
- url
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- type
- Commission response to text adopted in plenary
- title
- SP(2009)1067
- body
- EC
- commission
-
- DG
- Budget
- Commissioner
- KALLAS Siim
- type
- Commission response to text adopted in plenary
|
| committees |
added |
-
- body
- EP
- responsible
- False
- committee
- AFET
- date
- 2008-06-03
- committee_full
- Foreign Affairs (Associated committee)
- rapporteur
-
- group
- PPE-DE
- name
- MLADENOV Nickolay
-
- body
- EP
- responsible
- False
- committee
- BUDG
- date
- 2008-06-18
- committee_full
- Budgets
- rapporteur
-
- group
- PPE-DE
- name
- ANDRIKIENĖ Laima Liucija
-
- body
- EP
- responsible
- True
- committee
- CONT
- date
- 2008-03-26
- committee_full
- Budgetary Control (Associated committee)
- rapporteur
-
- group
- PPE-DE
- name
- MATHIEU Véronique
-
- body
- EP
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- committee
- DEVE
- date
- 2008-06-25
- committee_full
- Development (Associated committee)
- rapporteur
-
- group
- PPE-DE
- name
- ŐRY Csaba
|
| other |
added |
-
- body
- EC
- dg
- Budget
- commissioner
- KALLAS Siim
|
| procedure |
added |
- dossier_of_the_committee
- CONT/6/64123
- geographical_area
- reference
- 2008/2152(INI)
- title
- Implementation of Community funds in Afghanistan
- legal_basis
- Rules of Procedure of the European Parliament EP 048
- Rules of Procedure of the European Parliament EP 048-p2
- stage_reached
- Procedure completed
- subtype
- Initiative
- type
- INI - Own-initiative procedure
- subject
- 6.30.02 Financial and technical cooperation and assistance
- 6.30.04 Loans to third-countries, Guarantee Fund
- 6.40.05.06 Relations with the countries of the Middle East
- 8.70.03 Budgetary control and discharge, implementation of the budget
|