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Politics

War-torn Afghanistan 'open for business'

November 27, 2018

Afghan President Ashraf Ghani has urged foreign firms to invest in his country, claiming there are huge profits to be made. The appeal comes as both the Taliban and "Islamic State" ramp up attacks.

https://p.dw.com/p/3917c
Afghan President Ashraf Ghani at the Geneva Conference
Image: Getty Images/AFP/F. Coffrini

Ashraf Ghani called for greater foreign investment on Tuesday — the opening day of the Geneva Conference on Afghanistan — but steered clear of mentioning the country's grave security problems and food shortages.

The country held the promise of rich profits, said Ghani, claiming that economic growth could exceed 10 percent.

"It's a different Afghanistan," the president said. "We are open for business. I hope you are open for partnerships."

In particular, the president said the country needed help to develop its renewable energy sector to exploit an "amazing potential of 220,000 megawatts of solar and 80,000 megawatts of wind."

Ghani called attention to Afghanistan's natural resources, pointing at new mining and hydrocarbon laws to encourage investment.

Read more: Opinion: Hope for Afghanistan's democracy lies with voters

The president also touted the country's position at the crossroads joining southern, central and western Asia, saying its location would be "solid gold in the next 50 years."

Looking on the bright side

Ghani largely avoided drawing attention to the country's internal conflicts, mentioning "instability" only once. He was speaking on a day when three US soldiers and a military contractor were killed by a roadside bomb in Afghanistan.

However, the challenges facing the country were addressed by Toby Lanzer, the deputy chief of the UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan. As well as an upsurge in violence from both Taliban and "Islamic State" militants, 3.6 million Afghans are threatened by hunger that comes on the heels of a drought.

Ongoing Afghanistan drought

"This is one of the worst moments for the people of Afghanistan, but on many fronts important progress has been made in the last 24 months," said Lanzer.

Since the nominal end of the US-led NATO combat mission in 2014, the Afghan government has struggled to keep control in many areas of the country. NATO troops remain in the country for training and auxiliary purposes to this day.

According to Jawad Nader, another speaker in Geneva on Tuesday, who is head of the British and Irish Agencies Afghanistan Group, the situation in Afghanistan has deteriorated in the last two years.

"Afghanistan is at a breaking point," said Nader.

As the two-day conference took place, the European Union announced 474 million euros ($535 million) in financial aid for Afghanistan.

rc/msh (dpa, Reuters)

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