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The cable said the United Arab Emirates revealed that it had stopped former Afghan Vice President Ahmad Zia Masood entering the country with $52 million earlier in 2009. He was allowed to keep most of the money "without revealing the money's origin or destination," according to the document. The document notes that the former chairman of the troubled Kabul Bank owns multiple properties in Dubai. "Many other notable private individuals and public officials maintain assets (primarily property) outside Afghanistan, suggesting these individuals are extracting as much wealth as possible while conditions permit," the document said. The cable said Afghan Central Bank Governor Abdul Qadir Fitrat, however, noted that about $600 million had left Afghanistan's banking system, although not necessarily the country, before the elections because of uncertainty over the outcome of the ballot. He stressed that there were no indications of significant capital flight. Afghan Finance Minister Omar Zakhilwal said last summer that about $4.2 billion in cash had been transferred through the airport during the past three and one half years. He said that while it was not illegal to transfer cash out of Afghanistan, officials were concerned about the amount being transferred. In an Oct. 3, 2009, cable, Eikenberry describes up the U.S. predicament after meeting Ahmad Wali Karzi, the president's half brother, who has faced widespread allegations of involvement in racketeering, drug-trafficking and assassinations of rivals. The younger Karzai denies those allegations. "The meeting with AWK highlights one of our major challenges in Afghanistan: how to fight corruption and connect the people to their government, when the key government officials are themselves corrupt," Eikenberry writes. The cables also show Iranian influence in Afghanistan, including political meddling and training insurgents. On Feb. 2, Karzai's chief of staff, Umar Daudzai, told U.S. Embassy officials that the Iranians "no longer even bother to deny their support for the Taliban," and that on occasion, young Afghan men cross into Iran, where they are recruited and trained to return and fight.
[Associated
Press;
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