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Taliban deny claims in US report and say they do not divert aid sent to Afghanistan

• Aug 14, 2025, 5:06 PM
9 min de lecture
1

The Taliban denied using force to divert international aid in Afghanistan on Thursday, responding to a US watchdog report that said authorities used "every means at their disposal, including force," to ensure that aid goes where they want it to.

The 118-page report, published a day earlier by the US Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction, said the Taliban use their regulatory power to determine which NGOs may operate and under what conditions.

The report added that the Taliban block and redirect aid to ensure it benefits Pashtun communities over minority Hazara or Tajik groups and that they refuse to allow NGOs to operate unless they hire Taliban-affiliated businesses, NGOs and individuals.

Until recently, the US was the largest donor to Afghanistan and last year provided 43% of all international humanitarian funding to Kabul.

But the administration of US President Donald Trump stopped foreign aid to the country because, according to officials, the money was benefiting the Taliban.

Taliban fighters stand guard inside the Hamid Karzai International Airport after the US withdrawal in Kabul, 31 August, 2021
Taliban fighters stand guard inside the Hamid Karzai International Airport after the US withdrawal in Kabul, 31 August, 2021 AP Photo

The watchdog report, based on interviews with 90 current and former officials, including at the UN and from the US, also found that an employee at an Afghan NGO was killed for exposing the diversion of food aid to Taliban military training camps.

"The Taliban may manipulate exchange rates and rig currency auctions of imported US dollars for profit," the report stated.

It added that the Taliban may "also collude with senior UN officials to demand kickbacks from UN vendors."

A 2023 United States Institute of Peace report found that the Taliban had "infiltrated and influenced” most UN-managed assistance programs."

A spokesperson for Afghanistan's Economy Ministry, which oversees foreign and domestic NGOs, rejected the report’s findings, claiming that humanitarian aid from international organisations was provided directly by domestic and foreign bodies through UN offices, without the intervention of Taliban institutions.

A Taliban fighter stands guard next to the Shah-Do Shamshira Mosque in Kabul, 7 June, 2025
A Taliban fighter stands guard next to the Shah-Do Shamshira Mosque in Kabul, 7 June, 2025 AP Photo

"We strive to create the necessary facilities for aid organizations to promote economic growth and reduce poverty," said the spokesperson, Abdul Rahman Habib, adding that "We support the transparent activities of domestic and foreign organisations and monitor their projects."

The UN mission in Afghanistan told the Associated Press in a statement that the report highlighted the "extremely complex operating environment" for aid delivery in Afghanistan, including attempts at interference and restrictions from authorities.

It also addressed the report's "kickback" allegations.

"We take extremely seriously any allegations of malpractice and corruption, either by United Nations officials or implementing partners, and ensure these are promptly investigated," the statement said.

"We encourage anyone in possession of any evidence of aid diversion, misuse, misconduct, fraud, and abuse to immediately report such information through the established, formal, and confidential reporting channels so that these can be investigated."

Curtailing women's rights

A USAID official told the watchdog in 2023 that the Taliban refused to register women-led NGOs, prevented them from opening bank accounts, refused to authorise women-focused projects, demanded that women on boards of directors be replaced with men and threatened to close organisations that failed to comply with their policies.

In that same year, the report said, even two high-ranking female UN officials, the UN deputy secretary general and the executive director of UN Women, "were told they should not be on public site visits without male chaperones, specifically, a husband, father, or brother."

Afghan women wait to receive food rations distributed by a humanitarian aid group in Kabul, 23 May, 2023
Afghan women wait to receive food rations distributed by a humanitarian aid group in Kabul, 23 May, 2023 AP Photo

The UN said last week that dozens of female Afghan staff had received death threats. The threats come against a backdrop of severe restrictions placed on women since the Taliban returned to power in 2021.

The Taliban denied such threats had been made or that it was possible to make them.

The Taliban barred Afghan women from working at domestic and foreign NGOs in December 2022, extending the ban to the UN six months later and then threatening to shut down agencies and groups still employing women.

Some women have nonetheless remained in key sectors, such as health care and urgent humanitarian assistance, areas where aid agencies report a great need.

Aid agencies say more than half of Afghanistan's population, roughly 23 million people, need humanitarian assistance.

The crisis stems from decades of conflict, including the 20-year US war with the Taliban, as well as entrenched poverty and climate shocks.


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