The Oklahoman

Afghan aid groups are stuck in limbo, workers ‘wait and pray’

- Isabel Debre

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates – A month after the fall of Kabul, the world is still wrestling with how to help Afghanista­n’s impoverish­ed people without propping up their Taliban leaders – a question that grows more urgent by the day.

With the Afghan government severed from the internatio­nal banking system, aid groups both inside Afghanista­n and abroad say they are struggling to get emergency relief, basic services and funds to a population at risk of starvation, unemployme­nt and the coronaviru­s after 20 years of war.

Among the groups struggling to function is a public health nonprofit that paid salaries and purchased food and fuel for hospitals with contributi­ons from the World Bank, the European Union and the U.S. Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t. The $600 million in funds, which were funneled through the Afghan Health Ministry, dried up overnight after the Taliban took over the capital.

Now, clinics in Afghanista­n’s eastern Khost Province no longer can afford to clean even as they are beset with COVID-19 patients, and the region’s hospitals have asked patients to purchase their own syringes, according to Organizati­on for Health Promotion and Management’s local chapter head Abdul Wali.

“All we do is wait and pray for cash to come,” Wali said. “We face disaster, if this continues.”

Donor countries pledged during a United Nations appeal this week to open their purse strings to the tune of $1.2 billion in humanitari­an aid. But attempts by Western government­s and internatio­nal financial institutio­ns to deprive the Taliban-controlled government of other funding sources until its intentions are clearer also has Afghan’s most vulnerable citizens hurting.

The World Bank, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and the European Union suspended financing for projects in Afghanista­n, and the United States froze $7 billion in Afghan foreign reserves held in New York. Foreign aid to Afghanista­n previously ran some $8.5 billion a year – nearly half of the country’s gross domestic product.

Without access to its own or foreign funds, the interim government in Kabul can’t even pay the import taxes needed to bring containers of badly needed food from a port in Pakistan, the country’s Chamber of Commerce and Industry Vice Chairman Yonus Momand said.

The West’s strategy is to strangle the Taliban’s finances to induce Afghanista­n’s new leaders to respect the rights of women and religious minorities. The all-male, hard-line Cabinet appointed last week includes several ministers subject to U.N. sanctions and one with a $5 million FBI bounty on his head.

While it’s unclear how long Afghan central bank reserves will remain out of reach, American officials insist that humanitari­an groups can sidestep Taliban authoritie­s to deliver directly to the needy Afghans fearing for their lives and futures in the wake of the chaotic U.S. pullout.

“It’s definitely still possible to meet the basic needs of Afghans without rewarding the government with broader economic assistance and diplomatic recognitio­n,” said Lisa Curtis, former South and Central Asia director of the U.S. National Security Council.

But the situation on the ground shows the limits of that approach. Fighting over the years has displaced over 3.5 million people – including over half a million since the start of the year. The price of basic goods has soared. Bank lines snake down streets as people wait hours, even days, to withdraw money so they can feed their families.

While individual­s are allowed to withdraw a maximum of $200 per week from Afghanista­n’s banks, organizati­ons are unable to get any funds. The paralysis has hampered the work of local authoritie­s who used World Bank developmen­t funds to pay for health

services and clean water, as well as internatio­nal charitable groups trying to run vast aid operations.

“The cash remains the main issue,” said Stefan Recker, Afghanista­n director for Catholic relief organizati­on Caritas. “We cannot pay our own staff, run our aid projects or implement badly needed new programs.”

Cut off from their bank accounts, groups dependent on internatio­nal donors are using stop-gap methods to stay afloat. They are getting their hands on operating cash through a mixture of mobile payment service M-PESA, Western Union transfers and hawala – the informal money transfer system that helped power the economy when the Taliban ruled Afghanista­n in the 1990s.

The ancient system, which existed in the country before banks, relies on the principle that if there are two people who want to send equal amounts of money between two locations, cash doesn’t need to change hands. Internatio­nal anti-poverty organizati­on CARE is among the relief providers that rely on hawala dealers to transfer funds and record loans across provinces.

Meanwhile, some countries, including the United Arab Emirates, Qatar and Uzbekistan, have avoided the messy debate over financial aid by dispatchin­g planeloads of food and medicine to Kabul, betting that bags of rice will get distribute­d to the needy and not line the pockets of Taliban ministers who are on terrorism watch lists.

 ?? BERNAT ARMANGUE/AP ?? An Afghan woman holds her 5-month-old daughter, Samina, at the malnutriti­on ward of the Indira Gandhi Children Hospital in Kabul, Afghanista­n, on Wednesday. The question of how the world will get aid to Afghan citizens without enriching Taliban rulers is haunting the country.
BERNAT ARMANGUE/AP An Afghan woman holds her 5-month-old daughter, Samina, at the malnutriti­on ward of the Indira Gandhi Children Hospital in Kabul, Afghanista­n, on Wednesday. The question of how the world will get aid to Afghan citizens without enriching Taliban rulers is haunting the country.

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