USA Stole Money From Afghans’: People Take to Streets of Kabul to Protest US Asset Seizure
Joe Biden signed an executive order Friday allowing for $7 billion in Afghan Central Bank funds in the US to be split in two into a ‘humanitarian trust’ and a fund to pay victims of the 9/11 terror attacks. Afghanistan is the latest nation to fall victim to the US policy of asset pilfering, with Iran and Venezuela previously robbed of billions.
A small group of demonstrators took the streets of Kabul on Saturday to protest Washington’s “illegal” seizure of $7 billion in cash which the previous government had stashed in US banks before Afghanistan was overrun by the Taliban* last summer.
Protesters gathered before the Grand Id Gah Mosque with makeshift cardboard signs, some of them in illegible English, reading “USA stole money from Afghans”, “America is cruel” and “America should give us one million [illegible] people damage.”
In addition to slamming Biden’s decision to use $3.5 billion in Afghan assets for payments to families of American 9/11 victims, protesters demanded financial compensation for the tens of thousands of Afghans who died during the 19+ year war and occupation of their country.
The vast
majority of Afghanistan’s overseas assets abroad have been stuck in limbo in US
banks ever since the NATO-backed government’s collapse last August. Along with
$7 billion in the US, another $2 billion is stashed in Germany, Switzerland and
the United Arab Emirates.
The Taliban blasted the Biden administration over
the "theft" of Afghan assets on Friday, calling his decision a
"showcase of the human and moral decline of the country and people."
Washington
has promised that $3.5 billion of the $7 billion will be put into a
humanitarian trust which will be used to aid the Afghan people. The rest of the
money will remain in the US, pending court rulings on legal claims against the
Taliban by the families of victims of the 11 September 2001 terror attacks.
The United
States holds the Taliban partially responsible for the 9/11 attacks, citing the
group's decision to provide refuge to al-Qaeda* commander and terror mastermind
Osama bin Laden. The Taliban's refusal to hand him over to US authorities
served as a pretext for the US invasion of Afghanistan in 2001. The Taliban maintain to this day that
US officials have yet to show them evidence that bin Laden was responsible for
9/11.
US courts
have not shied away from seizing assets even of countries which had absolutely
nothing to do with 9/11 to pay compensation for the attacks. In 2018, a New
York court ordered $6 billion in Iranian assets
frozen in US banks to be redistributed to 9/11 victims' families, even though
none of the 19 terrorist hijackers were Iranians, and despite Iran's record of battling al-Qaeda, the
Taliban and other jihadist groups.
*The
Taliban is an organization under UN sanctions for terrorist activities.
*A terrorist
group outlawed in Russia and many other countries.
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