U.N. urgently needs cash in Afghanistan, but struggles for solution
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[October 28, 2021]
By Jonathan Landay and Michelle Nichols
WASHINGTON/NEW YORK (Reuters) - The United
Nations cannot get enough cash into Afghanistan to deliver humanitarian
aid to millions of people on the brink of starvation and is struggling
to develop options to help stabilize the collapsing economy, U.N.
officials said.
Ultimately political solutions are needed, a senior U.N. official told
Reuters on condition of anonymity, an apparent reference to sanctions
relief and for governments and institutions to free up billions of
dollars of Afghan assets held overseas.
In the meantime U.N. agencies are scrambling to find ways to get large
amounts of U.S. dollars into Afghanistan to combat a liquidity crisis
that has taken hold since the Taliban ousted the Western-backed
government in August. The U.N. official shared with Reuters some of the
options being suggested.
The delivery of U.S. dollars to Afghanistan has stopped since the
Islamist militants seized power and if countries or international
financial institutions don't step up then the United Nations might have
to fill the gap, said the official.
One suggested option is using Afghanistan International Bank, which
could bring in and store money, but there are issues with insurance, the
U.N. official said.
The United Nations is also aware that no one option will work and
several avenues to get enough cash into Afghanistan are needed, the
official said.
U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has called for the International
Monetary Fund to agree on waivers or mechanisms to get money into
Afghanistan. The IMF has blocked the Taliban from accessing some $440
million in new emergency reserves.
Much of the Afghan central bank's $10 billion in overseas assets have
been frozen as well, most of it in the United States. The U.S. Treasury
has said there are no plans to release the money.
"We need to work together to make the economy breathe again and to help
people survive," Guterres said on Wednesday. "Injecting liquidity into
the Afghan economy can be done without violating international laws or
compromising principles."
FLYING IN MONEY NOT ON TABLE YET
The United Nations has repeatedly warned that Afghanistan's economy is
on the brink of collapse and would likely further fuel a refugee crisis.
When asked about U.N. efforts to get cash into Afghanistan, Mary-Ellen
McGroarty, head of the World Food Programme in Afghanistan, told
reporters on Tuesday: "The U.N. collective is looking at what potential
solutions we could have, but flying in money to the country is not on
the table yet."
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A boy sells bread at a makeshift shelter for displaced Afghan
families, who are fleeing the violence in their provinces, at Shahr-e
Naw park, in Kabul, Afghanistan October 4, 2021. REUTERS/Jorge
Silva//File Photo
"What we are using at the moment is the limited
liquidity that is in the country," she said. "But the longer this
goes on ... we're finding it's becoming more and more difficult."
Some 8.7 million people are "one step away from starvation," said
McGroarty, adding: "There is a tsunami of destitution, incredible
suffering and hunger spiraling out of control."
The Taliban is facing growing international pressure for an
inclusive and representative Afghan government and to uphold human
rights, particularly those of women and girls in return for
international recognition and freeing up aid and reserves.
Donors and institutions are also seeking to avoid running afoul of
U.N. and unilateral sanctions on the Taliban.
The United Nations is appealing for countries "to provide
humanitarian financial exemptions to allow funds to reach aid
organizations in the country," said U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric,
without naming names.
U.N. agencies and aid groups are currently using informal
money-moving networks - known as hawalas - and small amounts of cash
in banks to pay staff salaries and for other smaller scale
purchases, Dujarric told Reuters.
"These modalities are not sufficient for the large scale operations
requiring cash payments or cash assistance in-country, however,"
said Dujarric, adding that the United Nations was talking to
international financial institutions to find a solution that would
expand aid operations.
A key part of U.N. plans to inject money into Afghanistan is by
providing cash directly to poor Afghan families.
(Reporting by Jonathan Landay in Washington and Michelle Nichols in
New York; Editing by Mary Milliken and Grant McCool)
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