Afghan central bank says $9 billion reserves abroad

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. (Image Courtesy: DA Afghan Bank)
Highlights
- Central bank governor says that the country has some $9 billion in reserves abroad
- Ajmal Ahmady wrote on Twitter that the majority of that - some $7 billion - is being held in U.S. Federal Reserve bonds, assets and gold.
- U.S. sanctions on the Taliban mean that they cannot access any funds.
Ajmal Ahmady, the head of Afghanistan's Central Bank, wrote on Twitter on Wednesday that the majority of that - some $7 billion - is being held in U.S. Federal Reserve bonds, assets and gold.
Ahmady says Afghanistan's holding of physical U.S. dollars "is close to zero" as the country did not receive a planned cash shipment amid the Taliban offensive that swept the country last week.
"The next shipment never arrived," he wrote. "Seems like our partners had good intelligence as to what was going to happen."
He noted the lack of U.S. dollars likely will see the afghani depreciate and inflation rise, hurting the poor in the country. Getting access to those reserves likely will be complicated by the U.S. government considering the Taliban a sanctioned terror group.
The "Taliban won militarily - but now have to govern," he wrote. "It is not easy."
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