Afghanistan has run out of money. Soon you can get money for emergency aid, believes Norwegian Refugee Council Jan Egeland.
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Taliban-led Afghanistan is threatened with collapse. The hospitals are filled with malnourished children.
Aid organizations that are ready to help do not receive money from Afghan banks. Tens of billions of kroner that Afghanistan has left abroad have been frozen.
Talks between the Taliban and the United States in Doha last weekend, however, give hope for a speedy solution.
– I hope and believe that there can be an agreement between the Americans and the Taliban, says Jan Egeland, Secretary General of the Norwegian Refugee Council.
Egeland was in Afghanistan in late September, met with two of the Taliban’s top leaders and saw a country on the brink of collapse. Hundreds of thousands of government employees, such as doctors, nurses and teachers, have not been paid since May.
– Hoping for good news
NRC has money in Afghan banks, but since the Taliban took power in mid-August, it has not been possible to withdraw more than small amounts. They have spent more than NOK 40 million on emergency aid that is now being imported from Pakistan. But in order to avoid collapse, one must start the banking system and pay public employees in hospitals and schools.
It requires agreement between the two main actors, namely the Taliban and the US government. It’s not very easy. Both because the Taliban seized power by force and because they seem to continue to discriminate against women and minorities.
The Taliban are breaking the promises they have made to Afghan women and girls, whose dreams are shattered, UN Secretary-General António Guterres warned on Monday in a statement.