Taliban Pushing to Unlock Billions in Central Bank Reserves Abroad
KABUL (Reuters) – The Taliban government in Afghanistan is pressing for the release of billions of dollars in Afghan central bank reserves overseas, which have been frozen since the group’s takeover of the country.
“The money belongs to the Afghan nation. Just give us our own money,” Taliban finance ministry spokesman Ahmad Wali Haqmal told Reuters, adding, “Freezing this money is unethical and is against all international laws and values.”
Haqmal said that Afghanistan would respect human rights, including the education of women, but within the framework of law, as he sought fresh funds on top of humanitarian aid that he said had offered only “small relief.”
Meanwhile, a top central bank official has called on European countries, including Germany, to release their share of the reserves to avoid an economic collapse in Afghanistan that could trigger mass migration toward Europe.
“The situation is desperate and the amount of cash is dwindling,” Shah Mehrabi, a board member of the Afghan central bank said, warning that, “Europe is going to be affected most severely if Afghanistan does not get access to this money”.
He added Afghanistan needed $150 million each month to “prevent imminent crisis,” adding that any transfer could be monitored by an auditor.
“If reserves remain frozen, Afghan importers will not be able to pay for their shipments, banks will start to collapse, food will be become scarce, grocery stores will be empty,” he stated.
According to Mehrabi, about $431 million of Afghan central bank reserves are held with German lender Commerzbank, and roughly $94 million with Germany’s Central Bank, the Bundesbank.
The Bank for International Settlements, an umbrella group for global central banks in Switzerland, holds a further approximately $660 million of Afghan reserves.
The Taliban have already warned Western diplomats that insisting on sanctions as a means to pressure their governance could undermine security and trigger a wave of economic refugees.
Nearly $10 billion in Afghanistan’s national assets have been held by the U.S. Federal Reserve since the Taliban laid siege to Kabul in August and overthrew a U.S.-backed government. Deputy U.S. Treasury Secretary Wally Adeyemo has ruled out any possibility of allowing the Taliban access to the reserves.