Title | Document type |
Afghan women carve a career in a man’s world08 Mar. 2011 . “ We really enjoy this work ,” Salima says enthusiastically as she and a colleague stand up to their ankles in thick mud, tracing intricate designs in pencil on a length of wood headed for Nos’ saw mill. “ It is interesting and it gives us a salary. I | News |
Press briefing by the Commander of NATO's Training mission in Afghanistan, Lieutenant General William Caldwell - 23 Feb 201123 Feb. 2011 : FT Deutschland. Q : It's Klaus Hecking from the Financial Times Deutschland. General, two questions, a shorter question and a longer question. The very short question is, what salaries do these recruits receive during the training, and what | Opinion |
''Afghanistan: The 2011-14 Campaign'' - Speech by Amb. Mark Sedwill, NATO's Senior Civilian Representative for Afghanistan, at the Institute for International Affairs, Helsinki27 Jan. 2011 . Raising police salaries above subsistence levels has made a difference too. The economic highlight of 2010 was the unearthing of Afghanistan's extraordinary and diverse mineral wealth. While the opportunities are obvious, we mustn't ignore the risks | Opinion |
Training the Afghan army – one man’s story20 Jan. 2011 ,” he says. “Their problems should be solved and dealt with. A soldier needs three things: first, good accommodation; second, salary should be given on time; and third, their vacations. If a commander or leader takes these three points in mind, I think | News |
Training the Afghan army – one man’s story20 Jan. 2011 ,” he says. “Their problems should be solved and dealt with. A soldier needs three things: first, good accommodation; second, salary should be given on time; and third, their vacations. If a commander or leader takes these three points in mind, I think | News |
Presentation to the media of a script for transition in Afghanistan by NATO's Senior Civilian Representative in Afghanistan, Ambassador Mark Sedwill14 Oct. 2010 with people, money and equipment? And that leads to my final question, this all points to pledges from the international community to pay long-term Afghan National Security Forces salaries. Those pledges are not there and the pledges to fully equip these ANA | Opinion |
Weekly press briefing by NATO Spokesman James Appathurai and Mark Sedwill, Senior Civilian Representative for Afghanistan16 Jul. 2010 a year, give or take. The, I think—I'm not an expert on this—I think the estimate for the cost of the Afghan Forces, the salary cost of the Afghan Forces was around half that number long term. The IMF, I think, though that they would be sustainable | Opinion |
Press briefing by LtGen William Caldwell, Commander of the NATO Training Mission – Afghanistan (NTM-A)04 Mar. 2010 , the ammunition, instructors, you do everything once they're inside of Turkey. We'll continue to pay their salaries, but we'll move them there to Turkey and you take control of the training and all support requirements associated with that, and then after 30 days | Opinion |
Weekly press briefing by NATO Spokesman, James Appathurai and briefing by the NATO Military Committee spokesman, Colonel Massimo Panizzi20 Jan. 2010 the ANA from 134,000 to 171,000. I'm sure NATO probably can get the training in place, but that raises the question, paying their salaries and where's the equipment coming from, because otherwise you're just training a potential Taliban recruitment force | Opinion |
Photo exhibition illustrates Australia’s commitment in Afghanistan17 Jun. 2009 increasingly close relationship with NATO started a decade ago, has helped improve rural infrastructure in Afghanistan including water supply, sanitation and irrigation. It has also supported the salaries of some 64,000 Afghan police to provide law | News |