EU to pay €79.5m toward Afghan rebuilding

The European Commission said tooday it would hand out €79.5 million to support reconstruction projects in Afghanistan.

The European Commission said tooday it would hand out €79.5 million to support reconstruction projects in Afghanistan.

The money will be used for helping to create a health system, making public-sector reforms, and removing some of the many landmines that kill or maim more than 100 people a month in Afghanistan.

The sum is part of a €400 million aid package the Commission is granting Afghanistan in 2003 and 2004.

Commission spokesman Mr Jean-Charles Ellermann-Kingombe said the funds would help support the weak local public sector. "Capacity building is particularly important given the weakness of the administration," he told a daily news briefing.

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"It will allow them to pay for the costs of salaries of civil servants like policemen and teachers".

The Commission, which acts as the executive of the 15-nation European Union, is one of the biggest donors to Afghanistan, and has been involved in the country since the aftermath of a US war against the former Taliban regime in 2001.

In 2002 the Commission provided more than €280 million for rebuilding Afghanistan, including €73 million for humanitarian aid.