Millions of dollars set aside to pay Afghanistan’s police force are unaccounted for, and the UN agency in charge of those funds has been “disturbingly ambiguous” about where the money went, according to documents released by the Special Inspector for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR).
In letters sent to the administrator of the United Nations Development Programme, SIGAR head John Sopko pointed to “a string of irregularities” that raised serious concerns about corruption and mismanagement. Sopko also asked that the UNDP do more to make sure money was not being used to pay “ghost employees” or get funneled through fraudulent deductions to dishonest officials.
In one case, nearly $24 million was deducted from police salaries for a “pension deduction,” taken by the Afghan Ministry of Interior. But, said Sopko in a mid-September letter to two American generals in Afghanistan, there is “very little confidence that UNDP is taking meaningful steps to address the problems of dubious deductions from [Afghan National Police (ANP)] salaries and payments to individuals who may not be reporting to work.”
The U.S. and other nations have donated more than $3 billion to the Law and Order Trust Fund for Afghanistan, the fund that pays the nation’s police force. Helen Clark, the UNDP administrator, has argued that it is not the agency’s job to conduct oversight of some of the programs administered through the trust fund.
The ANP has struggled to battle corruption in its ranks, and for several months last winter, officers were not paid due to what Afghan officials told The New York Times was simply an administrative issue.









