Taliban threaten to reconsider US policy following seizure of Afghan resources

Afghanistan will have to reconsider its policy toward the United States if Washington does not back down from its decision to seize $ 7 billion in Afghan central bank reserves, half of which is to be paid in compensation for 9/11 victims. 2001, the Taliban announced today.

“The 9/11 attacks have nothing to do with Afghanistan. If the United States does not change its position and continue its provocative actions, the Islamic Emirate will also be forced to reconsider its policy toward the United States,” said Inamullah Samangani. Taliban deputy spokesman in an official announcement on Twitter.

US President Joe Biden on Friday signed a decree authorizing the seizure of $ 7 billion in Afghan central bank reserves stored in the United States.

Biden wants half of that amount to go to compensation claims specifically filed by the families of 9/11 victims. He predicts the other half will go to humanitarian aid in Afghanistan, but will be paid in such a way that the money does not go to hands of the Taliban, the White House explained.

“US President Biden has frozen Afghanistan’s assets, which were originally deposited in his country’s banks, in defiance of all international rules, and now wants to take control of them irresponsibly,” the Taliban said in a statement.

On Friday, in a first reaction to Biden’s decision, the Taliban called the seizure of Afghan resources a “theft”, arguing that it “represents the lowest level of human and moral decline of a country and a nation.”

Afghanistan has been plunged into a deep humanitarian crisis since the Taliban came to power last August after 20 years of catastrophic war and the cessation of international aid, which accounted for 75% of Afghanistan’s budget. According to the UN, 55% of the population, ie 23 million Afghans, are at risk of starvation.

Source: AMPE

Source: Capital

You may also like