Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
International

Spectre Of 'Ghost Schools' In Afghanistan Doesn't Seem To Spook Canada

The Canadian Press, 05 Jul, 2015 12:27 PM
    OTTAWA — Canadian officials are shrugging off U.S. concerns that school enrolment numbers in Afghanistan — one of the most tangible indicators of the impact of millions in aid spending — may have been inflated or falsified outright.
     
    The American agency that oversees Afghan aid spending ordered a review of enrolment data after Afghanistan's education minister implied the numbers are misleading and that money may have been spent on so-called "ghost schools" that don't even exist.
     
    "These allegations suggest that U.S. and other donors may have paid for schools that students do not attend and for the salaries of teachers who do not teach," John Sopko, the special inspector general for Afghanistan reconstruction, wrote in a letter to the United States Agency for International Development (USAID).
     
    Canadian politicians and bureaucrats routinely cite a huge spike in enrolment as proof that at least $227 million in education spending in Afghanistan, including the construction of dozens of new schools, has made a difference.
     
    When asked what Canada was doing to verify the statistics it uses, a spokesperson for Foreign Affairs initially said while they were aware Afghan officials sometimes inflate numbers in the media, Canada takes a different approach. 
     
    "(Foreign Affairs) is conservative when reporting Afghan school enrolment figures from 2013 which state that more than 8.4 million Afghan children, almost 39 per cent of whom are girls, are enrolled in formal and community-based schools," Francois Lasalle said in an email.
     
    "This is a significant increase from only one million boys enrolled in formal schools in 2001."
     
    Those figures, Lasalle said, were vetted and reported on by the Afghan Ministry of Education Management Information System.
     
    Problem is, it was precisely those figures — and that information system — that were flagged by the American special inspector.
     
    "USAID has cited a jump in students enrolled in schools — from an estimated 900,000 in 2002 to more than 8 million in 2013 — as a clear indicator of progress," wrote Sopko.
     
    "The data USAID uses to measure this progress came from the MOE's Education Management Information System (EMIS), which USAID has said it cannot verify, and which it now appears that officials from the Karzai administration may have falsified."
     
    In May, Afghan media reported that Minister of Education Asadullah Haneef Bakhi told parliament the government of former president Hamid Karzai made up education data to get more money from the international community.
     
    After Sopko's concerns were made public, Bakhi reiterated some of his own.
     
    "In some of the insecure areas, there are no schools, but the benefits, opportunities, money for infrastructure, money for teachers and so on have taken place," he told TOLOnews, according to an English translation of the interview that appears on the channel's website.
     
    When asked to explain why Canada wasn't worried about the veracity of the same data, Foreign Affairs took a different approach.
     
    In a follow up email, a different spokesperson said Canada seeks to validate the data it gets from Afghanistan via the World Bank, which oversees some of the largest education-oriented programs.
     
    Their latest figures state 7.6 million children were in primary school in 2010.
     
    "Nevertheless, given the conflict, basic insecurity, and rugged terrain it is difficult for all parties involved to fully confirm these figures," spokesperson Diana Khaddaj writes.
     
    In its response to Sopko this week, USAID said it believed Bakhi's words were misinterpreted and he was not alleging actual fraud, just bad data collection, as well as a tendency by the former government to publicly overstate known enrolment.
     
    They said there is no hard evidence of corruption or fraud.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Satnam Singh, Racially Asbused Indian Man In New Zealand, To Get Damages

    Satnam Singh, Racially Asbused Indian Man In New Zealand, To Get Damages
    An Indian-origin liquor store owner and manager in New Zealand have been ordered to pay an Indian employee NZD45,000 ($32,881) in damages over racial harassment, media reported on Tuesday.

    Satnam Singh, Racially Asbused Indian Man In New Zealand, To Get Damages

    Apple Watch unveiled: lots of features, functions, price tags. So... Do you want it?

    Apple Watch unveiled: lots of features, functions, price tags. So... Do you want it?
    SAN FRANCISCO — Make calls, read email, control music, manage Instagram photos, keep up with your workout, pay for groceries, open your hotel room door. CEO Tim Cook says you can do it all from your wrist with Apple Watch — for 18 hours a day. That's how long the battery will last on an average day.

    Apple Watch unveiled: lots of features, functions, price tags. So... Do you want it?

    Canadian official 'strongly refutes' Kurdish account of friendly-fire death

    Canadian official 'strongly refutes' Kurdish account of friendly-fire death
    OTTAWA — A senior Canadian government official says he adamantly rejects a Kurdish account of a friendly-fire incident in Iraq that saw peshmerga fighters kill one Canadian soldier and wound three others. Sgt. Andrew Joseph Doiron was gunned down in the night-time darkness Friday when his special forces unit was surprised by a hail of gunfire from a group of their Kurdish peshmerga allies.

    Canadian official 'strongly refutes' Kurdish account of friendly-fire death

    IS releases 19 abducted Christian Assyrians

    IS releases 19 abducted Christian Assyrians
    The Islamic State (IS) militants on Sunday released 19 Christian Assyrians they had kidnapped last month, a monitoring group reported.The 19 people are the first batch of 29 Assyrians the sharia court of the IS exonerated on Saturday, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said, Xinhua reported.

    IS releases 19 abducted Christian Assyrians

    Western leaders condemn killing of Russia's Nemtsov, press Kremlin for full investigation

    Western leaders condemn killing of Russia's Nemtsov, press Kremlin for full investigation
    People lays flowers at the place where Boris Nemtsov, a charismatic Russian opposition leader and sharp critic of President Vladimir Putin, was attacked, at Red Square in Moscow, Russia, Saturday, Feb. 28, 2015. Nemtsov was gunned down Saturday near the Kremlin, just a day before a planned protest against the government. (AP Photo/Denis Tyrin)

    Western leaders condemn killing of Russia's Nemtsov, press Kremlin for full investigation

    Indian teacher in Qatar forced to quit over Modi caricature

    Indian teacher in Qatar forced to quit over Modi caricature
    A woman teacher in an Indian school in Qatar's capital Doha has reportedly been forced to quit her job after she posted a caricature of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on her Facebook page, media reported Thursday.

    Indian teacher in Qatar forced to quit over Modi caricature