Afghanistan: Taliban to start paying public employees
The Taliban government said on Saturday that it had begun paying government employees who had been without their salaries since the Islamist group seized power in Kabul this August. The takeover sparked a major financial crisis. “We are going to start paying salaries from today. We will pay three months’ salaries,” Ahmad Wali Haqmal, spokesman for the finance ministry said at a press conference. The payment will be made available through the country’s banking system. But it remains unclear if the funds will reach those who need it. Since August, Afghanistan’s banking sector has collapsed, and those with money in the bank have struggled to access their funds as branches curtailed withdrawals.
In the absence of money, most government employees have yet to return to work. Many had not even been paid for months before the Taliban came to power. Another Taliban spokesman, Inamullah Samangani, said on Saturday that the group’s revenue collection had increased recently. “The finance ministry says that in the last 78 working days of the last three months, we have generated income of about 26.915 billion Afghanis ($288 million, €255 million),” he claimed. “We collected 557 million Afghanis ($5.9 million) in revenue on Wednesday alone,” Samangani said, quoting the finance ministry, adding the payment of pensions of retired workers would also resume soon.
Afghanistan’s financial crunch has been aggravated since Washington froze aid to Kabul and as the World Bank and International Monetary Fund halted Afghanistan’s access to funding. The situation has forced Afghans to sell their household goods to raise money for food and other essentials with the local currency crashing and prices skyrocketing. Foreign donors led by the US used to provide more than 75% of the public expenditure under Afghanistan’s previous 20-year Washington-backed government. The Taliban sent an open letter to the US congress on Wednesday, pleading them to release Afghan assets frozen after their takeover of the country and warning that economic turmoil at home could lead to trouble abroad. But President Joe Biden’s administration said on Friday that Kabul must make changes before receiving the funds. “Legitimacy and support must be earned by actions to address terrorism, establish an inclusive government, and respect the rights of minorities, women and girls – including equal access to education and employment,” Thomas West, the US Special Representative for Afghanistan, said in a statement. Washington has seized nearly $9.5 billion in assets belonging to the Afghan central bank. But West pointed to the ongoing draught and the COVID-19 pandemic, saying they were also contributing to the financial calamity. “The US will continue to support the Afghan people with humanitarian aid,” he said, noting that $474 million has already been provided this year.