http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/02/24/AR2010022404914_pf.html
Officials puzzle over millions of dollars leaving Afghanistan by plane 
for Dubai

By Andrew Higgins
Washington Post Foreign Service
Thursday, February 25, 2010; A10

KABUL -- A blizzard of bank notes is flying out of Afghanistan -- often 
in full view of customs officers at the Kabul airport -- as part of a 
cash exodus that is confounding U.S. officials and raising concerns 
about the money's origin.

The cash, estimated to total well over $1 billion a year, flows mostly 
to the Persian Gulf emirate of Dubai, where many wealthy Afghans now 
park their families and funds, according to U.S. and Afghan officials. 
So long as departing cash is declared at the airport here, its transfer 
is legal.

But at a time when the United States and its allies are spending 
billions of dollars to prop up the fragile government of President Hamid 
Karzai, the volume of the outflow has stirred concerns that funds have 
been diverted from aid. The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, for 
its part, is trying to figure out whether some of the money comes from 
Afghanistan's thriving opium trade. And officials in neighboring 
Pakistan think that at least some of the cash leaving Kabul has been 
smuggled overland from Pakistan.

"All this money magically appears from nowhere," said a U.S. official 
who monitors Afghanistan's growing role as a hub for cash transfers to 
Dubai, which has six flights a day to and from Kabul.

Meanwhile, the United States is stepping up efforts to stop money flow 
in the other direction -- into Afghanistan and Pakistan in support of 
al-Qaeda and the Taliban. Senior Treasury Department officials visited 
Kabul this month to discuss the cash flows and other issues relating to 
this country's infant, often chaotic financial sector.

Tracking Afghan exchanges has long been made difficult by the widespread 
use of traditional money-moving outfits, known as "hawalas," which keep 
few records. The Afghan central bank, supported by U.S. Treasury 
advisers, is trying to get a grip on them by licensing their operations.

In the meantime, the money continues to flow. Cash declaration forms 
filed at Kabul International Airport and reviewed by The Washington Post 
show that Afghan passengers took more than $180 million to Dubai during 
a two-month period starting in July. If that rate held for the entire 
year, the amount of cash that left Afghanistan in 2009 would have far 
exceeded the country's annual tax and other domestic revenue of about 
$875 million.

The declaration forms highlight the prominent and often opaque role 
played by hawalas. Asked to identify the "source of funds" in forms 
issued by the Afghan central bank, cash couriers frequently put down the 
name of the same Kabul hawala, an outfit called New Ansari Exchange.

Early last month, Afghan police and intelligence officers raided New 
Ansari's office in Kabul's bazaar district, carting away documents and 
computers, said Afghan bankers familiar with the operation. U.S. 
officials declined to comment on what prompted the raid. New Ansari 
Exchange, which is affiliated with a licensed Afghan bank, closed for a 
day or so but was soon up and running again.

The total volume of departing cash is almost certainly much higher than 
the declared amount. A Chinese man, for instance, was arrested recently 
at the Kabul airport carrying 800,000 undeclared euros (about $1.1 million).

Cash also can be moved easily through a VIP section at the airport, from 
which Afghan officials generally leave without being searched. American 
officials said that they have repeatedly raised the issue of special 
treatment for VIPs at the Kabul airport with the Afghan government but 
that they have made no headway.

One U.S. official said he had been told by a senior Dubai police officer 
that an Afghan diplomat flew into the emirate's airport last year with 
more than $2 million worth of euros in undeclared cash. The Afghan 
consul general in Dubai, Haji Rashoudin Mohammadi, said in a telephone 
interview that he was not aware of any such incident.

The high volume of cash passing through Kabul's airport first came to 
light last summer when British company Global Strategies Group, which 
has an airport security contract, started filing reports on the money 
transfers at the request of Afghanistan's National Directorate of 
Security, the domestic intelligence agency. The country's notoriously 
corrupt police force, however, complained about this arrangement, and 
Global stopped its reporting in September, according to someone familiar 
with the matter.

Afghan bankers interviewed in Kabul said that much of the money that 
does get declared belongs to traders who want to buy goods in Dubai but 
want to avoid the fees, delays and paperwork that result from 
conventional wire transfers.

The cash flown out of Kabul includes a wide range of foreign currencies. 
Most is in U.S. dollars, euros and -- to the bafflement of officials -- 
Saudi Arabian riyals, a currency not widely used in Afghanistan.

Last month, a well-dressed Afghan man en route to Dubai was found 
carrying three briefcases stuffed with $3 million in U.S. currency and 
$2 million in Saudi currency, according to an American official who was 
present when the notes were counted. A few days later, the same man was 
back at the Kabul airport, en route to Dubai again, with about $5 
million in U.S. and Saudi bank notes.

One theory is that some of the Arab nation's cash might come from Saudi 
donations that were supposed to go to mosques and other projects in 
Afghanistan and Pakistan. But, the American official said, "we don't 
really know what is going on."

Efforts to figure out just how much money is leaving Afghanistan and why 
have been hampered by a lack of cooperation from Dubai, complained 
Afghan and U.S. officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity. 
Dubai's financial problems, said a U.S. official, had left the emirate 
eager for foreign cash, and "they don't seem to care where it comes 
from." Dubai authorities declined to comment.

Reply via email to