Russia's Putin calls on US, Europe to unfreeze Afghan assets as ties with Taliban strengthen
Russian President called on Thursday for Western nations to release Taliban-led Afghanistan'sÌý.
"We call insistently for compensation for the losses incurred by Afghans during the years of occupation and for the release of illegally frozen Afghan funds," Putin said at a conference in the Kazakh capital .
"In order to calm the situation on Afghan soil,Ìýwe must, of course, jointly contribute to its economic recovery."
Afghanistan's central bank had more thanÌý$9 billion in assets deposited at banks in the United States and Europe when the Taliban seized control of the country in August 2021.ÌýWashington immediately froze the of these assets that were stored in the US.
In February, US President Joe Biden ordered the $7 billion be released and split between families of the victims of the 9/11 terrorist attacks and aid for Afghanistan.
Last month, the US set up an Afghan relief fund withÌý$3.5 billion of the frozen money. The Taliban government will not have access to the fund, which will be held at the Bank for International Settlements in Switzerland.
, which has suffered financially for decades, has gone through economic freefall since the Taliban took the helm of the country. The UN Development Fund last week thatÌýten years of Afghan economic growth had been reversed in the 12 months since the Taliban came to power.Ìý
Some countries have pulled the aid they once provided to Afghanistan either entirely or partly, saying that they fear the hardline Islamist group could use the money for nefarious reasons.
As the country hunkers down for a cold, harsh winter, Noorullah Azizi, the Minister of Commerce and Industry for the Taliban-led government,Ìý Bloomberg earlier this week thatÌýKabul wasÌýworking to build closer trade ties with Russia.
Moscow,Ìýreeling under severe western sanctions imposed after its invasion of Ukraine earlier this year,Ìýhad offered Afghanistan food grains and fuel at a "discounted" rate, Azizi reportedly said.