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David Cameron's 'fantastically corrupt' gaffe mocked by Afghan delegation at Anti-Corruption Summit

The Afghani delegation signed an anti-corruption pledge, which was ignored by every British overseas territory

Matt Broomfield
Friday 13 May 2016 18:32 EDT
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A banner showing Afghan President Ashraf Ghani during a protest outside the Anti-Corruption Summit
A banner showing Afghan President Ashraf Ghani during a protest outside the Anti-Corruption Summit (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth)

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David Cameron didn't care that Afghanistan was "fantastically corrupt" when he helped to pour billions of pounds of investment, military infrastructure and misplaced aid into the country, a senior Afghan official pointed out yesterday.

The unnamed official was responding to Mr Cameron's gaffe on the eve of his much-vaunted Anti-Corruption Summit. The PM was overheard saying: "We’ve got the leaders of some fantastically corrupt countries coming to Britain. Nigeria and Afghanistan, possibly the two most corrupt countries in the world.”

Speaking at the conference the next day, the senior member of the Afghan delegation reminded Mr Cameron that clumsy Western intervention in Afghanistan allowed corruption to flourish. He said: "We inherited, and I quote, a 'fantastically corrupt' system.

Cameron on corruption

"In my country for the past decade there have been enthusiastic international community partnerships willing to pour in billions into a country without thinking about the safeguards that were needed in order to ensure that money would be spent transparently and effectively."

Since the turn of the century, the key driver of corruption in Afghanistan has been the war fought between the Afghan security forces and a US-led coalition on one side and the Taliban on the other.

In February 2014, an internal report by the Pentagon suggested that the coalition had aided and abetted corruption by supporting warlords, bankrolling lucrative private trucking contracts and routing aid via corrupt officials rather than supporting grassroots humanitarian work.

World leaders, including David Cameron and Afghan President Ashraf Ghani, at the summit
World leaders, including David Cameron and Afghan President Ashraf Ghani, at the summit (next24online/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

And according to a 2012 survey by the Asia Foundation, the average Afghan considers the period of rule under Hamid Karzai from 2001 onwards to have been more corrupt than any of the previous five regimes.

The former president worked closely with the American government, but many Afghans perceive this relationship as responsible for an explosion in systemic corruption.

The Taliban was thus able to garner support from Afghan citizens, the authors of the report suggest, by offering an alternative to a corrupt system where mujahideen warlords raked in cash from the invading forces and subsequent aid efforts.

After the US, the United Kingdom was the largest contributor to the 13-year-long Operation Enduring Freedom, and Mr Cameron was commander-in-chief of British forces in the country from 2010 until the official end of the war 2014. The UK continues to send around £200 million annually in aid to Afghanistan.

The amount of opium being produced also increased as much as threefold following the coalition invasion, which further entrenched corruption into Afghan society as officials and security forces were paid off. Afghan President Ashraf Ghani used his speech at the summit to remind Mr Cameron that 96 per cent of the profits from the Afghan drug trade are laundered in Europe.

At the summit Mr Cameron was not able to to convince a single British overseas territory to agree to publish details of who really owns companies registered in their jurisdiction. Afghanistan and Nigeria both pledged to publish this information.

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