Civil society voices heard on Mineral Law
By Javed Noorani
Afghanistan’s mineral law of 2010
scored 63 marks out of 100 during the resource governance index which was
carried by Revenue Watch Institute in 2012. The law was the best in the region
according to the Resource Governance Index but had weaknesses which could have
been ironed out with informed amendments. The Ministry of Mines and
Petroleum, to the shock of people who were worried about the weaknesses of the
2010 Law, introduced a new draft mineral law infested with fetal weakness and
sent it to the Cabinet of Ministers for approval. However, it was timely and rightly
stopped by some senior leaders for its conspicuous flaws which triggered the
debate over it and its contents. Integrity Watch Afghanistan opposed the law
based on its understanding of the mining sector and politics wrapping it and
met some senior and influential officials in the government and Wolusi Jirga to
seek interventions for bringing necessary amendments.
It is imperative to underline that the
MoMP redrafted the old Hydrocarbon Law without any consultation and got it
passed in the cabinet without much read about it. It is equally critical to
underline that there are rumors that
some ex-high level officials at the MoMP was approached by lobbies based in
Dubai along with the powerful local lobbies and influenced them to redraft the law to their interest.
This is subject of research right now.
It is important to underline that
Afghanistan loses up to half a billion dollars annually due to illegal and
legal mining across the country. Every year up to 4 million tons of coal is
extracted while little rent on it is paid to the state and the rest of it has
gone to the company. Similarly there are other companies which over produce and
underpays. Integrity Watch based
on rough data carried out a calculation which shows that Afghanistan’s mining
industry is as much as US$ 750-800 million dollars. The figure excludes revenue from Amu Darya
and Aynak Copper Mines. The
government has however not been able to collect even a small percent of the
rent from the sector largely because powerful lords are involved in extraction
while officials of the government provide them the escape route.
Integrity Watch and Global Witness
carried out analysis of the draft mineral law in the light of the above facts.The
analysis of the draft mineral law and found out that the bill was deficient,
weak and poorly worded to leave loopholes for mining operators to escape legal
nets.The draft mineral was introduced to nurture the oligarchs and open an
inlet for the construction lobby to jump into the mining sector and capture the
sector.
The civil society
made a robust attempt to reach the President
of Afghanistan and the effort led to fruitful discussion and a channel was
opened to civil society to flag its concerns on the mining sector. The advocacy
with the President’s office had some positive results. The president’s response was
heartwarming at the early stage.
The second stage which we thought to
be the last opportunity for intervention started at Wolusi Jirga. Integrity
Watch and Global Witness reached out to over 35 members of Wolusi Jirga to
discuss the law and the missing essentials which were imperative to give a
decent start to Afghanistan to develop the mining sector and retain a good
percentage of resource rent. The engagement with the Wolusi Jirga to
mobilize members of Parliament and seek a debate over the law was interesting
and the MPs felt the importance and need for further work on the draft. While Integrity
Watch and
Global Witness continued
its efforts with members Ministry of Parliamentary Affairs to feed the Parliament
with more technical issues to take out the weaknesses of the law. But this
effort did not bear much fruit because the political will at the Ministry of
Parliamentary Affairs to support civil society in this regard eroded.
The law is the first of its kind that
has been contemplated by government and Wolusi Jirga and it was held in the House
of Representatives for 4 months without making an inch progress yet the process
was so positive and becoming of a Parliament. The mining Lobbies which
have strong support in some ministries were confident that Wolusi Jirga will
pass the law and to their shock the law remained under debate until 21st
January the last day before the Parliament went on recess.
The lobby saw the winter break for the
Wolusi Jirga as an opportunity to impress the President with the argument that
the mineral law was in national interest and it would bring US$ 20 billion in
investment to country. Ironically, the
people who tied the law to national interest are the same people who have been
plundering this country and their effort was a way to define their interest as
national to get the law passed. A simple question that was volleyed in their
court, was the productivity in terms of revenues to the state from the 300
signed contracts in the mining sector.
The voice to call on the President of
Afghanistan grew denser asking his Excellency to pass the bill through a decree.
It yet came as another shock to the civil society activists who were opposing
the law. One of the civil society activists narrates his reaction and follow up
with the President
of Afghanistan as,
When I heard Qorban
Haqjo of the Afghan Chamber of Commerce and Industry saying that the President of Afghanistan has
agreed to pass the bill through a decree to make it a law, I wrote to the
President’s Office that the draft law in
its current form will be the worst service one could do. Within 5 minutes of my
writing to his office, I received a call asking me what were my concerns about
the law. I narrated the issues with the law and I was asked for more points. I
sent them the next day and they called back to confirm the reception of the
points.
The process continued and the President
withheld his signature and seemingly called for a technical committee to
discuss the draft further before he signs on it.
The law is in limbo for the third time
and as a civil society activist I rejoice to see a debate engulfing the state,
government and civil society. The diplomatic community is divided. On the
one side there are people who understand civil society’s concerns on the other
side the focus is on the law as a milestone of Tokyo Mutual Accountability Framework
(TMAF). The side pushing for the law does so without peeping inside it to
understand if it will serve the needs of Afghanistan. The law will not
serve the genuine and professional investors.
All in all, the
interactions with various stakeholders have been both challenging and
encouraging. The Afghan mining sector is facing massive challenges due to
illegal extraction and powerful elite entering the sector, while we will
continue to advocate for change to ensure the collective good of all Afghans.