The Pak Banker

Afghan security chief endorses theft charge against Ghani

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As a US government agency probes claims that former Afghan president Ashraf Ghani took with him $169 million while fleeing Kabul, a senior member of his security staff said that he has video proof of the alleged theft.

Brigadier General Piraz Ata Sharifi, who headed Mr Ghani's bodyguard, said in an interview that he not only saw huge bags of cash being transferre­d but also acquired a video clip from a CCTV camera. "One of my jobs was to disarm the soldiers on guard at the ministry before the president arrived, for his security," Mr Sharifi told the Daily Mail Online from a hideout in Afghanista­n.

Mr Sharifi, wanted by the Taliban for interrogat­ion, is hiding at an undisclose­d location in Afghanista­n. The Taliban have announced a reward of one million Afghanis for his arrest.

"We were waiting for the president there. But then I got a call to say that instead of coming to the defence ministry, the president went to the airport. The defence minister had also fled. So had my boss. So had all of Mr Ghani's close family and entourage," he said. Sharifi claims ex-Afghan president stole hundreds of millions, perhaps billions of dollars before fleeing

"I have a [CCTV] recording [from the palace] which shows that an individual at the Afghan Bank brought a lot of money to Mr Ghani before he left," Mr Sharifi claimed. "Hundreds of millions, perhaps billions of dollars.

There were many big bags, and they were heavy." He said he was disappoint­ed as he liked Mr Ghani. "This money was for the currency exchange market.

Each Thursday, the dollars were brought for that purpose. Instead, it was taken by the president. Mr Ghani knew in the end what would happen. So, he took all the money and escaped."

Mr Ghani, however, has denied the allegation that he left Kabul with four cars and a chopper full of $169 million, adding that he left Afghanista­n unceremoni­ously to avoid a bloodshed.

His abrupt departure allowed the Taliban to take Kabul two weeks before the

US troop pullout.

Earlier this week, the US government's inspector general in charge of investigat­ing misuse of aid money in Afghanista­n told Congress he's "looking into" claims that Mr Ghani and his subordinat­es stole millions of dollars before fleeing.

"We haven't proven that yet. We're looking into that," Inspector General John Sopko said during a House hearing on Afghanista­n.

"There are allegation­s, but not only with President Ghani. There are allegation­s with senior officials in their finance ministry, their central bank and a number of other ministries walking off with millions of dollars," he said.

"But again, those are just allegation­s. We have not confirmed any of those yet," he said. Last month, White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki told reporters that so far, they had no evidence of Mr Ghani's involvemen­t in this theft, but the Biden administra­tion would let the United Nations probe the allegation­s. "We'd defer to the UN on that. I don't have any further comment from here," she said.

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