UN Security Council adopts resolution to ease Afghan aid

The UN Security Council on Wednesday unanimously adopted a US-proposed resolution to help humanitarian aid reach desperate Afghans, while seeking to keep funds out of Taliban hands.

The resolution — a first step by the UN after months of wrangling over how to avert a humanitarian catastrophe amid economic meltdown in Afghanistan — was welcomed by the Islamists as a “good step.”

Since the Taliban swept back to power in August, billions of dollars in aid and assets have been frozen by the West in what the UN has described as an “unprecedented fiscal shock” to the aid-dependent Afghan economy.

For months now, observers have been warning that millions face a choice between starvation or migration during a combined food, fuel and cash crisis throughout the bitter winter.

The Security Council resolution allows aid to flow into the country for one year without violating international sanctions aimed at isolating the Taliban, whose regime is not recognized by the international community.

“We appreciate it (as) it can help Afghanistan’s economic situation,” Taliban spokesman Zabijullah Mujahid said, adding he hoped the move would also help “speed up” removal of crippling economic and banking sanctions imposed on entities linked to the group.

But the aid is “not a blank check for any organization to disregard its international obligations,” US deputy UN ambassador Jeffrey DeLaurentis said, referring to the Taliban. 

The United States also announced additional steps on Wednesday easing sanctions against the Taliban to allow aid, updating guidance to make clear that exports of goods and cash transfers are allowed as long as they do not go to individuals targeted by US sanctions.

– ‘Critical’ food aid –

In Afghanistan, aid workers may be involved in financial transactions with ministries headed by sanctioned individuals. The UN resolution ensures that the aid workers are not violating sanctions.

The text also includes monitoring of the destination of aid, as well as a UN report on the functioning of the assistance every six months.

“If there is evidence that the exemption is being abused or that money is reaching sanctioned individuals, it is possible to reverse it,” a diplomat told on condition of anonymity earlier this week.

UN undersecretary for humanitarian affairs, Martin Griffiths welcomed the resolution, saying that it would allow more than 160 humanitarian organizations “providing critical food and health assistance in Afghanistan … to implement the work we have planned.”

After the Taliban returned to power, the US froze nearly $9.5 billion from the Afghan central bank and the World Bank also suspended aid to Kabul.

The currency has collapsed, and without funds to pay civil servants, families have resorted to selling furniture and jewelry to make ends meet.

With the country also battered by drought and the Covid-19 pandemic, the United Nations early this month warned the fiscal shock could cause the economy to contract by 20 percent within a year.

International aid had represented 40 percent of Afghanistan’s GDP and financed 80 percent of its budget.

But Mujahid said the country was not facing such a crisis, although food prices and unemployment had risen.

“Aid has come from many countries and the government has vast stocks of food items that can be used when needed,” Mujahid said.

“So, we don’t see a threat of humanitarian crisis although people need assistance.”

On Wednesday, Russia called for the West to unfreeze Afghan assets. 

The World Bank announced on December 10 that it would provide $280 million in humanitarian aid to UNICEF and the World Food Programme by the end of December, to be distributed in Afghanistan.

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