
Continued international aid, including through the Afghanistan Reconstruction Trust Fund (ARTF), is vital to create better lives for millions of Afghans and sustain development gains. The #ProtectTheGains series highlights ARTF projects that have made a real difference toward achieving a more prosperous, inclusive, and peaceful Afghanistan.
As a member of her Community Development Council and Vice-Chair at the Gozar Assembly in Afghanistan's Herat City, 32-year old Zahra Hussaini has become a strong advocate for her community.
An elected representative, she has gained valuable leadership skills and improved her self-confidence. In her role, she also acquired intellectual and economic freedom—and the drive to advance the cause of other women.
The Citizens' Charter Program is the successor program to the National Solidarity Program (NSP), which pioneered a community-driven approach to development projects through Community Development Councils or CDCs. The Councils provide a high level of scrutiny and transparency to projects to help achieve better results.
While the Charter relies on a quota system to ensure fair representation, women’s’ inclusion in CDC activities, including in sub-committees, is uneven across Afghanistan.
In some conservative rural areas, particularly those under the Taliban's control, the role of women in public affairs has been very limited. Convincing men to see the benefits of women participating in development decisions and monitoring government services will take time and patience.
Women's participation as Community Development Councils leaders and beneficiaries is part of the Charter's objectives.
In other places, women have fared better and their presence in local governance bodies, particularly in health and education sub-committees, been more accepted. According to a recent study by CARE International,
The Afghan government's Score Card Initiative is of particular relevance as women's (and men's) monitoring of and feedback to education and health facilities is an empowering experience--especially when service providers respond to issues raised and improve services (e.g. teachers' attendance or following the intended schedule of the hours of operations).
The Score Card Initiative is designed to enable communities (including specific stakeholders) to assess and rate the services provided by the government through a simple but systematic approach and provide feedback to the government on services standards, create a dialogue between services users and services providers, and contribute to improved services provisions.
. Women often meet in spaces separate from men, even though
To succeed, the program needs to give women and men an equal voice in the design and implementation of projects that impact their lives and their communities.

Additionally, women receive training on specific initiates related to CDC work, such as the Women's Mobility Map, which draws attention to women's existing movements and enables women to negotiate attending CDC and Cluster CDC meetings.
Another key exercise is the Leaking Pot. It highlights households' incomes versus expenditures and flags potential debts, such as costly weddings, bride prices, and funerals. For communities, the Leaking Pot is an opportunity to discuss how costs can be reduced individually and collectively.
There are nearly 12,000 women occupying leadership positions in rural Community Development Councils throughout Afghanistan
Although seats are reserved for them, women have to compete for votes to fill leadership positions. However, secret ballot elections are not always possible, particularly in areas under Taliban control. Ballot facilitators sometimes spend considerable time convincing community elders and influential men of the importance of voting without one's choices being revealed.
The urban arm of the Charter works a bit differently. In big cities with large populations, four to five communities cluster to form a Gozar covering a larger geographic area. People elect their representatives to CDCs, and CDC members vote to elect Gozar Assemblies (GAs).
The subprojects have provided job opportunities, better infrastructure, and economic opportunities for women.

; set up women's saving groups, collected funds to help poor women meet wedding costs; promoted vaccination drives, girls' education initiatives, and hygiene education; and encouraged families to reduce costly wedding and funeral expenses.
In October 2019, women CDC members spoke with Afghan President Ashraf Ghani and his cabinet on behalf of the communities they represented at the National CDC Consultative Conference in Kabul. They discussed a variety of topics about women in Afghanistan's development. Every National CDC Consultative Conference since 2005 has seen women from remote districts representing their communities to the nation's leadership and raising their voices and priorities for community development.
. As a result, the nation will benefit from healthier citizens, improved education rates, and increased economic opportunities for both women and men.
The answer will be given on the time of discussion.
Keep up the good work!