From VOA:
“US to Allow All Commerical
Transactions with Afghanistan”
The U.S. Treasury on Friday
issued a new general license authorizing all commercial transactions with
Afghanistan's governing institutions, expanding recently announced exemptions
from sanctions against the Taliban and the Haqqani network. The new license,
the seventh issued by Treasury in recent months, allows "all transactions
involving Afghanistan and its governing institutions that would otherwise be
prohibited by U.S. sanctions," the Treasury Department said.
However, it still prohibits
financial transfers to the Taliban, the Haqqani network, associated entities
and individuals blocked by the Treasury Department. The action came after talks
between the Treasury Department and private sector executives doing business in
Afghanistan and is similar to a series of sanctions exemptions granted in
recent months to nongovernmental organizations. "Our action today recognizes
that in light of this dire crisis, it is essential that we address concerns
that sanctions inhibit commercial and financial activity while we continue to
deny financial resources to the Taliban, the Haqqani Network, and other malign
actors,” Deputy Treasury Secretary Wally Adeyemo said in a statement. Wide-ranging
U.S. economic sanctions against the Taliban date to their first time in power
in the 1990s. Both the Taliban and the Haqqani network are labeled Specially
Designated Global Terrorists by the Treasury Department.
'Too many Afghans starving' However,
in the wake of the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan in August, the Treasury
Department has issued a series of sanctions exemptions to allow Afghanistan to
cope with a teetering economy and a humanitarian crisis. "There are
too many Afghans starving today, too many Afghans who are cold; we all need to
act faster," a senior administration official told reporters during a
press call announcing the general license. There is also a growing
recognition that Afghanistan's humanitarian crisis is interlinked to an
economic crisis exacerbated by a U.S. decision in August to freeze more than $7
billion in Afghan reserves held at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. "One
of the things we know that is critical is ensuring that the economy is able to
function," the senior administration official said, speaking on condition
of anonymity.
U.S. President Joe Biden recently
issued an executive order that would split the frozen Afghan assets, freeing up
$3.5 billion for the families of the victims of the September 11, 2001,
attacks, while allocating the remainder for a humanitarian trust fund for
Afghanistan. The move was condemned by the Taliban and other Afghans who say
the money belongs to Afghanistan. But administration officials have since said
any decision to transfer the funds to the 9/11 victims will be subject to court
proceedings. "No decisions have been made regarding specific uses of this
$3.5 billion," the senior administration official said. Since October, the
Biden administration has announced more than $780 million in humanitarian aid
for Afghanistan and Afghan refugees in the region. In January, the United
Nations launched an appeal for more than $5 billion in humanitarian assistance
for Afghanistan, saying half of the country's population of 35 million faces
acute hunger.
^ Hopefully this will help the
ordinary Afghans. The US and the world just need to watch what money is going
into and out of Afghanistan. ^
https://www.voanews.com/a/us-to-allow-all-commerical-transactions-with-afghanistan/6460263.html
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