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Kerry-Lugar law aid to be spent on infrastructure and electric power projects: US - Printable Version

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Kerry-Lugar law aid to be spent on infrastructure and electric power projects: US - Naveed Yaseen - 11-20-2009 08:53 AM

Electricity to be the major focus: US near end of Pakistan aid review
WASHINGTON (November 20 2009): The United States expects to complete a review on how to spend $7.5 billion in proposed aid for Pakistan by the end of this month, with an early focus on the country's decrepit energy sector, senior US officials said on Wednesday. Chronic power shortages are a big political issue in Pakistan. They undermine growth potential, economists say, and weaken support for the fragile civilian government.

US officials involved in the review declined to say how $1.5 billion a year in new funds would be allocated but made clear that infrastructure projects, particularly electricity, was an important part of the review. "Energy will be a major focus," said one senior official. The aid has been signed into law but Congress has yet to appropriate the money. "It (energy shortages) affects people, it affects people's perception of their government and manufacturing and jobs - everything," added the official, who according to State Department rules asked not be quoted.

Last month, a US delegation travelled to Pakistan to work out priorities in resolving the energy crisis. The issue is seen as a test of Pakistan's government, which is battling militants and helping the United States in its fight against al Qaeda and the Taliban in neighbouring Afghanistan.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, during a visit to Pakistan last month, announced $125 million in new aid to upgrade power stations and transmission lines, part of a broader effort to reduce power shortages. Washington hopes such support will help Pakistan's government make tough decisions, including unpopular increases in electricity tariffs, said one official. The International Monetary Fund's quarterly report from July 31 on Pakistan's economic performance recommended three price hikes. The first was on October 1 and according to the IMF, there is agreement for two more.

OTHER PROGRAMS Other US funds will go to improve health, education, water management and roads. US aid to Pakistan has previously been channelled mostly through US-based nongovernmental groups or contractors, but the Obama administration plans to rely more on local Pakistani organisations and the government.

"It's about how we get Pakistani ownership, leadership and sustainability," one US official said. "We want to be sure that we are hand in glove with the government in helping them to deliver services." That change has sounded alarms in Congress, which has pushed for stringent safeguards to ensure the money is not lost via corruption.

"We are taking that very seriously," said the State Department official. Pakistani auditors vetted by US inspector generals were seeking Pakistani institutions with the capacity to deliver aid and proper accounting mechanisms, said the official.

US aid groups, afraid they will lose out on the new funds, say they are concerned there will not be enough US government staff on the ground to oversee the funds. But the senior US officials said the US Agency for International Development planned to double its staff in Pakistan to more than 60 in the next two years to handle this new workload.

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