From VOA:
“US Bank Freezes Accounts of
Afghanistan's US Embassy”
(An Afghan flag flutters outside
the Afghan embassy in Washington, Aug. 15, 2021, on the day Taliban insurgents
entered Afghanistan's capital, Kabul.)
Diplomats of the former Afghan
government who have held on to their jobs in the U.S. are grappling with a new
problem: their official bank accounts have been suspended. Two senior Afghan
diplomats, who did not want to be named because the issue is under discussion
with U.S. officials, confirmed to VOA that the Citibank accounts of the embassy
in Washington and two Afghan consulates in the U.S. have been suspended for
more than a month. The Afghan mission in Washington does not receive funds from
Kabul, because the Afghan capital now under the control of the Taliban, and it
has survived thus far through dwindling consular service fees. The consulates
have run out of new passports but continue to renew expired passports. Because
checks issued to cover passport renewal can no longer be made out to the
Afghanistan Embassy, the remaining staff members deposit blank money orders
into personal bank accounts, then meet at the end of each month to tally
embassy revenue. "We've held talks with the Department of State, but so
far there has been no breakthrough," one Afghan diplomat said, adding that
U.S. officials had advised the diplomats against discussing the matter
publicly. While the government they represented collapsed more than five months
ago, about 90 Afghan diplomats remain in four diplomatic posts in the U.S.,
including the Afghanistan Permanent Representative at the United Nations in New
York. Suspension of their official bank accounts has adversely impacted the
embassy's financial transactions, including salaries, rent and health care
insurance payments, the diplomats said. When asked about the status of the
mission's accounts, a State Department spokesperson told VOA, "There has
been no change in the accreditation status of Afghan mission members," but
declined to comment on the account suspensions. A spokesman for Citibank also
declined to comment.
Policy confusion? The
United States does not recognize the Taliban's self-declared Islamic Emirate as
the official government of Afghanistan, but U.S. officials have met with
Taliban officials in Qatar, Norway and elsewhere. "As we seek to
address humanitarian crisis together with allies, partners, and relief
[organizations]," U.S. special envoy for Afghanistan Thomas West said
before holding talks with the Taliban foreign minister, Amir Khan Muttaqi, in
Oslo on Sunday. "We will continue clear-eyed diplomacy with the Taliban
regarding our concerns and our abiding interest in a stable, rights-respecting
and inclusive Afghanistan." Analysts say the U.S. approach has led
to confusion among Afghans who are trying to sort out visa and logistical
issues, leaving them in legal limbo. "Not thinking through the
ramifications and implications of having these two parallel governance
structures going at the same time is a completely flawed approach," said
Candace Rondeaux, an expert at the Washington-based New America think tank. "I
think the U.S. has been confused on Afghanistan for a long time," said
Jennifer Murtazashvili, an expert with the Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace, adding that the U.S. will need a functioning Afghan mission to handle
consular services for the tens of thousands of Afghans who are being brought to
the U.S. since the collapse of the former Afghan government. The loss of
the bank accounts is the latest blow to the Afghan diplomatic mission, which
has already been laboring under severe financial restrictions. Calls to
the embassy are directed to a voice message system as all local staff have been
laid off, and diplomats say they have been working on-and-off on a voluntary
basis and without pay for two months. The embassy in Washington, like many
other Afghanistan diplomatic missions around the world, has refused to work
with the Taliban foreign ministry, and diplomats say they represent the former
Islamic Republic of Afghanistan. Despite repeated Taliban pleas for recognition
of the Islamic Emirate as the de facto government of Afghanistan, no country
has yet officially taken steps to recognize the regime.
Diplomats seeking asylum At
least three Afghan diplomats who worked at the embassy in Washington have
sought asylum in Canada and the rest are exploring long-term options, the two
diplomats said. "Obviously, we cannot return to Afghanistan,"
one of the diplomats said, adding that his diplomatic visa is set to expire in
December. "We are seeking a solution for the future of all our diplomats
here." Anticipating their move, the U.S. Citizenship, Immigration
and Customs agency has announced specific steps for the Afghan diplomats to
change their status in the U.S. "If you are an Afghan national who
entered the United States as an A-1, A-2, G-1, or G-2 nonimmigrant; were
performing duties that were diplomatic or semi-diplomatic on July 14, 2021; and
are seeking a Green Card under Section 13, you may file Form I-485, Application
to Register Permanent Residence or Adjust Status, without a fee," reads a
public notice at the USCIS website.
^ It is sad to know that these
hardworking people are being tossed-aside while the Taliban ruin 20 years of hard-won
freedoms. ^
https://www.voanews.com/a/us-bank-freezes-accounts-of-afghanistan-s-us-embassy-/6412424.html
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