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NATO soldiers, seen here in the province of Baghlan, are due to leave Afghanistan in 2014 ©Belga/AFP MEPs questioned the lack of results from the EU's strategy for Afghanistan in a debate with Catherine Ashton, the high representative for foreign affairs, on Tuesday 12 June. NATO troops are due to leave Afghanistan in 2014, but MEPs wonder if the country is ready to take over. They pointed to problems with corruption, poverty and the Taliban. Ms Ashton called Afghanistan a "long-term commitment" and said there had already been significant improvements.
Eija-Riitta Korhola, a Finnish centre-right member of the EPP group, said: "Only 20% of the EU aid actually reaches the people who need aid. International aid must be reformed. We have to get rid of the cultivation of drugs and give better training to the police and the army. The situation is still desperate and it is only getting worse."
Dutch Social-Democrat Thijs Berman, chair of the delegation for relations with Afghanistan, said: "When NATO troops leave Afghanistan in 2014, will the country be able to take control of its future peacefully? It doesn't currently seem so."
Romanian Liberal-Democrat Norica Nicolai said: "I'm not happy with Afghanistan's future. We can all report some achievements, but are these achievements enough to consider Afghanistan a stable and democratic country."
Ms Ashton told MEPs: "There is no doubt that this is a commitment that is difficult at times and requires us to continue to push hard on ensuring that what we believe should be done by the Afghan government is indeed done and that we ensure that our resources are well spent."
The high representative added there are good news stories as well. "We have seen health care improve, infant mortality going down and many, many, many girls in school finally getting the education they deserve. These are important."
Start
Strasbourg plenary session - 11-14 June 2012
Opening - Schengen, Serbia's new President, Layla Zana and Asmaa Mahfouz
Solidarity Fund - help in the event of a major natural disaster
Removing barriers to cross-border volunteering
Parliament approves plans to keep Europe safe from online threats
How working together on energy could increase the EU's power
Schengen: MEPs angry at Council attack on democratic powers
MEPs cast doubt on the future of Afghanistan
Economic governance with a wider vision
MEPs demand robust and flexible budget and reformed revenue system for the EU
EP endorse candidate for European Court of Auditors
EP calls for envoy to raise EU's human rights profile worldwide
Peruvian president addresses plenary in Strasbourg
MEPs approve plans for EBRD support to Arab Spring economies
Parliament adopts new rules for baby milks and gluten-free food