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HH Prince Karim Aga Khan
Speech in Afghanistan
Bismillah-ir-Rahman-ir-Rahim
Your Excellency President Hamid Karzai
Your Excellencies
Distinguished Guests
Ladies and Gentlemen
It is a great pleasure and honour to be with you all today. We
extend our warmest thanks to all those whose dedication has made
this conference possible, most especially to President Karzai and
the Government of Afghanistan for their central role - as well as
to Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz, who will attend tomorrow's closing
session.
Let me also express our deepest gratitude to Prime Minister Badawi
for his deep engagement with the subject of this conference - and
for the example Malaysia has provided of a successful, pluralistic,
Muslim country, guided by the ethics of Islam. This achievement is
something of which the whole Muslim world can be particularly
proud.
We are approaching the 50th anniversary of Malaysian independence
in September - so it is a particularly appropriate moment to salute
Malaysia's record as a role model for the Ummah and for the entire
developing world.
I am particularly aware these days of the significance of 50th
anniversaries, as I will complete, in July, my 50th year as Imam of
the Shia Ismaili Muslims.
It is appropriate to both of these anniversaries that we should be
talking today about an Enabling Environment for Development - for
this has been a central theme in the story of Malaysia since its
independence - and it has also been a central theme of my Imamat.
In fact, it was on another personal Jubilee occasion - just 25
years ago - that I addressed this topic at the first Enabling
Environment Conference in Nairobi.
Over the ensuing quarter century, we have learned a great deal
about the nature of Enabling Environments. Among other things, we
have been learning to free ourselves from overly simple myths about
how development works.
The term "Enabling Environment" has two implications which I would
underscore today. First, it reminds us that the conditions which
enable progress can be extremely complex, that an entire
"environment" of interacting forces must come together if
development is truly to take root - and to take off.
Second - the term recognizes that even the right environment is
still only an enabling condition - not a sufficient one. Our
conference title does not talk about an environment which �solves�
or �cures� or �progresses� or �prevails� - but rather about an
environment which �enables�. In the end, human progress must grow
out of the human heart and soul. The environment enables - but it
is the human spirit, guided and supported by the Divine Will, which
eventually triumphs.
What a sound enabling environment must do is to create a favourable
framework in which human creativity can flourish.
When I have spoken about this topic in the past, I have emphasized
such conditions as political stability, safety and security,
citizen rights, predictable democratic practices, and a legal and
administrative framework which is streamlined and efficient,
impartial and effective. While these concerns are largely the
responsibilities of government I believe that the ethics of Islam
can contribute significantly to their achievement, especially the
importance Islam places on mediation and conciliation.
Laying the State�s political foundation is a necessary first step
for an enabling environment, but even effective government can take
us only so far. And that is why we have been talking more in recent
years about two other sectors: first, what I often call the role of
�civil society�; and, secondly, the capacities of the private
sector.
By civil society, I mean a realm of activity which is neither
governmental nor commercial, institutions designed to advance the
public good, but powered by private energies. They include
non-commercial, non-governmental entities in fields such as
education, health, science and research. They embrace professional,
commercial, labour, ethnic and arts associations, and others
devoted to religion, communication, and the environment.
Of course, the civil sector includes international non-governmental
organizations - which are so well represented at this gathering.
But they also grow, increasingly, out of local communities and
indigenous populations. This is particularly true for Afghanistan,
where a broad sense of local commitment, tied to rural villages and
urban neighbourhoods, will be an indispensable development force.
Throughout the developing world, we see a new emphasis on the
capacities of indigenous organizations to meet development
challenges - on a bottom up rather than a top down approach.
Voluntary village associations, for example, are undertaking
projects which once lay in the political domain - ranging from the
installation of water and sanitation systems and the building of
irrigation canals, to the provision of educational services and the
support of health and safety standards.
In saying all of this, I do not mean to ignore the importance of
government. The role of civil society is to complement government
efforts, not compete with them. And the same thing is true of a
third important partner in a great alliance for development - the
private, business sector.
All around the world, private companies of all sizes are a rapidly
growing source of progressive energy. Increasingly, they see
corporate social responsibility not as something extra - a symbolic
after-thought tacked on to the corporate agenda at the end of the
day - but rather as part and parcel of their basic commercial
strategies. Many companies have set up dedicated departments or
corporate foundations to lead such efforts - budgeting a portion of
their proceeds to finance them. Other companies encourage and even
match the contributions of time and treasure made by individual
employees.
We can see a notable example of this potential here in Kabul.
Roshan is a mobile phone company, only four years old, but already
the largest company in Afghanistan - with over one million
customers and nearly a thousand employees. For almost two years
now, it has sponsored a department of Corporate Social
Responsibility - the first of its kind in Afghanistan.
Roshan sponsors micro-finance projects which enable women to become
independent entrepreneurs - selling phone services, or repairing
mobile phones. It provides playgrounds, meals, cultural and school
projects for street children. It has pioneered in the field of
Telemedicine - using fibre optic and microwave links to connect
local patients to sophisticated doctors and equipment in Karachi.
Roshan has recently been honoured, for these and other efforts, by
the prestigious Committee to Encourage Corporate Philanthropy - an
association of over 160 major corporations - as an inspirational
business model. .
The Roshan story is one I know well - since the company�s largest
shareholder is the Aga Khan Fund for Economic Development. But it
is only one of countless examples of imaginative business
initiatives.
Let me add one further thought - perhaps the most important. To be
sure, each of these three sectors - government, civil society, and
the business sector - can accomplish important things on its own.
But it is my conviction - that one of the chief obstacles to
development in our time is that the energies of all three sectors
are too often scattered and fragmented. Too often, the various
actors go about their business without enough reference to one
another. The result often reminds me of an orchestra made up of
talented and dedicated artists - but playing from different scores.
The result is not harmony but cacophony - and an unevenness of
public impact which is inherently unfair.
Let me be clear: I am not denying the importance of decentralized,
pluralistic approaches to development. . But I also believe that
the positive impact of all the participants could be compounded if
they understood one another even better, talked to one another even
more often, and partnered together even more effectively.
Some of you may recall how the World Bank has tried to foster a
series of stakeholder fora to encourage better coordination of
developmental efforts. I believe that such an effort could have
particular value for Afghanistan - where fragmentation and
decentralization has been so deeply embedded in the physical
geography of the country -and thus in its culture, as well.
Extreme forms of fragmentation have been a barrier to progress in
Afghanistan. The most profound example is the fact that much of
this country�s economic life � activities related to illicit drug
production - falls outside the reach of any legitimate regime. In
many developing countries, illicit activities have shrunk as legal
authority extends its influence and as alternative licit activities
- in the realm of agriculture for example - take on added value.
But these processes are still at an early stage in Afghanistan.
Yet even within the sphere of legality and legitimacy, the problem
of fragmentation and disconnection is an important challenge. Too
often the good things that happen here occur in relative isolation
from one another � too often the good people who contribute here
lack the sense of mutual support and shared insight which could
magnify their impact. The spirit of vigorous individual initiative
is deeply-rooted in the Afghan spirit - but it could be tapped more
effectively within a stronger framework of cooperation and
consultation.
We should not forget, however, that the political history of
Afghanistan is also one in which the traditional consultative
assembly �t he Loya Jirga - has played an important role. Its
objectives have been those of engagement, accommodation and
cooperation - and it is in that same spirit that a regular
stakeholder development forum in Afghanistan might usefully be
convened.
Perhaps our meeting today can add useful momentum to such a
process, not only by creating a roadmap for future progress but
also by ensuring that this roadmap will be seriously consulted and
appropriately adjusted as time goes on.
Many good things might grow out of such enhanced communication.
Among them, I would hope, would be an unfolding array of
public-private partnerships. The range of such partnerships has
been expanding of late - but there is still enormous unrealized
potential.
Such partnerships will require a profound spirit of reciprocal
obligation and mutual accountability - a readiness to share the
work, share the costs, share the risks, and share the credit.
A good example of a successful three way partnership is a recent
project to build health-care centres in Afghanistan. Local
communities donated the land, the government financed the
construction, and the Aga Khan Development Network trained the
staff.
Another quite different example in which I have been involved was
the creation of
Al-Azhar Park and revitalising the Darb al-Ahmar neighbourhood in
Cairo. At least ten different civil, governmental and private
groups came together in that effort from at least five different
countries.
Such partnerships can have another benefit as well - the partners
can learn a lot from one another. A village association, for
example, may need help with basic accounting practices. Another
group might be creative with local projects, but inexperienced in
extending their scale. Various other organizations may be good at
long-range planning, or public communication, or legal strategies.
Alliances of such entities should continually be comparing notes
and sharing best practices.
Nor should such alliances be limited by outmoded geographic
constraints. Here, as elsewhere, the future will depend on our
ability to rise above the accident of common geography and to rally
around common interests - whether our skills lie in apricot
processing or tourism, transport or literature or law.
Each step we take to expand our horizons will make the next step
easier. In Northern Afghanistan, for example, our network has built
several bridges across the Pyanj River to Tajikistan, and it has
been gratifying to see how markets have grown up around each of
them. And once such interaction is launched, the integration
process can accelerate. The regionalization impulse can be a
critical part of an effective enabling environment.
Let me close these remarks by asking what may seem to be an
impertinent question. How do we know whether these programs are
actually working or not? How do we know whether they are improving?
It would be very easy to mislead ourselves on this score -and to
assume that because we are trying hard, or spending significant
sums of money, or are inspired by noble intentions, or are holding
a lot of meetings - we must therefore be making an effective
impact.
But this is not always the case. And that is why it is so important
that all of us should be held accountable for the results we
produce - that our work should be measured by its observable,
positive impact on the quality of people�s lives.
But how should this measurement be done?
Let me mention in this regard a successful programme we have
started in a neighbouring country: the Pakistan Centre for
Philanthropy (PCP).
One of PCP�s roles is to function as a standard-setting body - a
group that certifies the effectiveness of organizations in
contributing to the public good. This certification becomes a �seal
of good housekeeping� for such institutions. The score-keeping is
done by independent judges in the areas of internal governance,
financial management and programme delivery. The goal is to set
sector-wide standards and to encourage the widespread adoption of
'best practices�.
The PCP uses its website and databases to tell these success
stories in ways which will inspire further successes. You can
imagine how such an important effort can help potential allies in
their search for credible partners. Even those organisations that
fail to meet the standards can benefit, as PCP steps in to link
them with specialised capacity-building groups.
The story of the PCP is another sign of a recent maturing process
in the development arena. It represents another component of a
strong enabling environment.
In sum, meeting the development challenge will continue to be a
complex matter - one which will not only demand the very best of
government, civil society and private enterprise, but will also
require new efforts to coordinate and harmonize their various
energies. And it will require discipline in the way we measure and
evaluate the outcomes. .
But I would end, as I began, by suggesting that an enabling
environment can only do so much. In the final analysis, it can
create a framework in which individuals can make the best possible
use of their own personal gifts.
An Ayat in the Holy Quran says: �Verily, God does not change a
people�s condition unless they change that which is in themselves.�
In the end, it is the will and the resourcefulness of the
individual human being that, with Allah�s blessings and guidance,
will determine our future.
It is to that end that this conference has been organized - and it
is to that end that each of us must continually be rededicated.
Thank you
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