NEW YORK, USA
The U.S. has frozen nearly $9.5 billion in assets belonging to the Afghan central bank and stopped shipments of cash to the nation as it tries to keep a Taliban-led government from accessing the money, an administration official confirmed Tuesday.
The official
said that any central bank assets that the Afghan government has in the U.S.
will not be available to the Taliban, which remains on the Treasury
Department’s sanctions designation list.
Ajmal
Ahmady, acting head of Da Afghan Bank, the nation’s central bank, early Monday
tweeted that he learned on Friday that shipments of dollars would stop as the
U.S. tried to block any Taliban effort to gain access to the funds.
DAB has $9.5 billion in
assets, a sizeable portion of which is in accounts with the New York Federal
Reserve and U.S.-based financial institutions.
U.S.
sanctions on the Taliban mean that they cannot access any funds. The vast
majority of DAB’s assets are not currently held in Afghanistan, according to
two people familiar with the matter.
The U.S.
Treasury Department declined to comment.
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