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Canada's Engagement in Afghanistan

www.afghanistan.gc.ca

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Development Projects

Canada is among the world's top donors to Afghanistan, which is our largest bilateral aid recipient. Canada supports a wide array of development projects in Afghanistan, including three signature projects that represent large-scale, significant contributions to rebuilding the country. The signature projects are on-going, as well as other development projects in the areas of Basic Services, Humanitarian Assistance, and National Institutions.

Canada supports three signature projects in Afghanistan, two focused in Kandahar (rehabilitating the Dahla Dam and its irrigation system, and building and repairing 50 schools in Kandahar province) and a third project with a national emphasis (eradicating polio).

  • Expand - Dahla Dam and irrigation system Dahla Dam and irrigation system
    Dahla Dam

    Repairing the Dahla Dam and its irrigation system is one of Canada’s three signature projects in Afghanistan. Through this project, 80 percent of Kandaharis who live along the Arghandab irrigation system will have access to a secure water supply to stimulate agricultural production. Having this project underway is an important step in the economic development of Kandahar province and Afghanistan. Learn more

  • Expand - Education Education
    Education

    Through Canada’s Education signature project, Canada is building, expanding and repairing 50 schools in targeted districts in Kandahar province. Learn more
     

  • Colapse Polio eradication
    Current phase: 2009-2011
    Project budget: $60 million

    Project description:

    Through the Polio Eradication signature project, more than seven million children across Afghanistan receive polio vaccinations, including 400,000 in Kandahar province. Polio vaccination campaigns occur regularly throughout Afghanistan at a national level, to ensure that polio is eradicated from the country, but also at a provincial level in areas where there is a higher rate of incidence of the disease.

    Canada’s investment in the eradication of polio makes Canada the largest international donor to the Global Polio Eradication Initiative in Afghanistan. Canada’s partners in the international community include the World Health Organization (WHO) and UNICEF.

    Afghanistan is one of four countries in the world where children can still contract polio. Children younger than the age of five are most at risk for being infected by the disease, and the risk is highest in southern Afghanistan, which includes Kandahar province. (Northern Afghanistan is considered to be polio-free.) With CIDA funding and partner participation in the polio-eradication signature project in Afghanistan, eliminating the debilitating disease is within reach. The polio campaigns have also been used as a platform for delivering other essential health services such as micronutrient supplementation and health promotion.

    Canada's signature polio project also includes an investment in cross-border activities. Children are being vaccinated at 11 posts along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border, which aims to prevent the disease from travelling between the two countries.

    The single most onerous barrier to eradicating polio in Afghanistan is a security situation that is unstable, and unpredictable. However, local health workers are working to ensure that the polio vaccine is administered to children despite this hardship.

    Progress to date:

    The Polio Eradication Signature Project has achieved the following significant results to date:

    • About 84 percent of Afghanistan is polio free, and 80 to 90 percent of all cases since 2006 have been found in the southern region.
    • As part of the national campaign, more than seven million children across Afghanistan continue to be immunized.
    • As of December 2009, Afghanistan was the first country to use a new type of vaccine, which, with a single dose, provides protection against two strains of polio.
    • Approximately 22,000 children were vaccinated by “transit teams” deployed along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border.
    • In July 2010, an estimated 364,000 children were vaccinated in Kandahar province, representing 90 percent of the targeted children reached.

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Date Modified:
2012-05-18