Catriona Laing

Catriona Laing

British Ambassador to Zimbabwe

Part of UK in Afghanistan

9th December 2012 Harare, Zimbabwe

Election fever grips Nawa

For four days in early December over 6200 elders and notables from across Nawa District in Helmand made their way to register for the upcoming District Community Council (DCC) election.

These DCC’s only occur in Helmand. It is the only province across Afghanistan where its citizens have the option to vote for a district representative body through a large open election process and hold these elected officials to account.

The Nawa election is taking place because the current elected District Community Councils three-year term is coming to an end.

The first election took place in 2009 and had an electorate of 398, however, election fever seems to have gripped the population. There has been campaigning by both the existing members of the DCC and opposition from new ‘upstarts’ who are challenging the existing members based on their record over the last three years.

This unprecedented turnout means that of the seven districts in Helmand that have elected DCCs, Nawa will have the largest electorate by far.

Marjah in 2011 had an election of 1500 voters, Sangin in March 2012 had almost 3000, and Nahr-e-Saraj in May 2012 had almost 3500. These three DCC elections in traditionally challenging areas of Helmand had no significant security incidents, and were entirely Afghan run without any support from the International Community.

The Election Day is due to take place early in the New Year.

It will be the single biggest official event ever to take place in Nawa. It will be an entirely de-militarised event with no ANA or ISAF personnel in the Shura will be televised and will be shown on Kabul and Lashkar Gah news.

The freedom of movement, the willingness of the population to engage, and the total control and administration of this process by the Afghan authorities is just one illustration of the remarkable progress that is taking place across Helmand.

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.