This blog post was published under the 2010 to 2015 Conservative and Liberal Democrat coalition government

Catriona Laing

Catriona Laing

British Ambassador to Zimbabwe

Part of UK in Afghanistan

21st July 2012 Harare, Zimbabwe

One year on, reflections on Lashkar Gah’s entry into Transition

To mark the one year anniversary of Lashkar Gah’s transition to Afghan control (the first area to transition in Helmand), please see a guest blog from the Stabilisation Advisor for Lashkar Gah at this significant time.


I arrived in Helmand in October of 2010 to work alongside local Government as a District Stabilisation Advisor, in the months preceding the Provincial Capital’s entry into Transition to Afghan responsibility. One year on from that entry into Transition, the positive changes seen in Lashkar Gah, both in security and governance terms, have had time to consolidate.

Most striking about Lashkar Gah’s entry into Transition was the great swell of Pashtun pride that accompanied it, taking some of us by surprise. There was a sense among Afghan authorities that not only were they ready to take the step, but that it was the right and, in their view, honourable thing to do. While July 2011 saw the Transition process take root in the mindset of those political and security elites most involved in the Province’s affairs, the past year has been about the wider population fostering an appreciation that things have changed.

To the wider population, International Community support in Lashkar Gah, although remaining, has become much less visible. This is a crucial step on the road to Transition, as the population comes to terms with the fact that they now have a Government which, although far from perfect, can provide leadership and a degree of basic services. Confidence in security forces also continues to grow.

But what does progress actually look like to residents of wider Lashkar Gah one year on?

Bustling Lashkar Gah Streets
Bustling Lashkar Gah Streets

By way of illustration, at the beginning of last year a drive to the North of the Helmand River could easily take two hours. A twenty-minute drive through the relatively traffic-free city streets, followed by a drive along a slow, bumpy and insecure track which could take around one and a half hours.

When I left Helmand earlier this year, that same drive had changed dramatically. A ‘commute’ through the city could easily now take double the time due to traffic and busy streets; while a highway, opened last year by the Provincial Governor, cuts travel time to the North of Lashkar Gah by around two-thirds. These are significant changes for communities which had previously found the city, its markets, clinics, and public officials, inaccessible.

Challenges remain, yet significantly the ownership of those challenges is becoming increasingly Afghan. One year after Lashkar Gah’s entry into Transition, if you were to have a cup of chai and discuss Transition with the elders and community leaders I used to sit with on a regular basis, I imagine they would still suggest that it is the ‘right’ path. That’s not to say they wouldn’t want to continue to have a little support along the way.

About Catriona Laing

I was born in Cardiff but brought up in South London. I studied economics and joined the civil service through the Government Economic Service after 2.5 years working for the…

I was born in Cardiff but brought up in South London. I studied
economics and joined the civil service through the Government Economic
Service after 2.5 years working for the Government of Botswana as an
infrastructure economist.
I was posted to Kenya to advise on the government’s development
programmes in East Africa, and then seconded to the United Nations
Mission in Somalia heading the UN Development Office.
I spent five years working for Prime Minister Tony Blair in his
strategy unit, and was later posted to head the DFID office in Sudan
running a £116 million programme and addressing the drivers of conflict.
Most recently I have been working for the Ministry of Justice to
establish the new international function with responsibility for
European and international justice.
I live with my partner – Clive Bates and our Sudanese dog – in
Balham. My hobbies are yoga, dog and mountain walking and cooking.