By
Hanif Sufizada
December 9,
2020
The Taliban
militants of Afghanistan have grown richer and more powerful since their
fundamentalist Islamic regime was toppled by U.S. forces in 2001.
Taliban militants and Afghan civilians celebrate the signing of a peace
deal with the United States on March 2. Noorullah Shirzada/AFP via Getty
Images)
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In the
fiscal year that ended in March 2020, the Taliban reportedly brought in US$1.6
billion, according to Mullah Yaqoob, son of the late Taliban spiritual leader
Mullah Mohammad Omar, who revealed the Taliban’s income sources in a
confidential report commissioned by NATO and later obtained by Radio Free
Europe/Radio Liberty.
In
comparison, the Afghan government brought in $5.55 billion during the same
period. The government is now in peace talks with the Taliban, seeking to end
their 19-year insurgency.
I study the
Taliban’s finances as an economic policy analyst at the Center for Afghanistan
Studies. Here’s where their money comes from.
1. Drugs
– $416 Million
Afghanistan
accounted for approximately 84% of global opium production over the past five
years, according to the United Nation’s World Drug Report 2020.
Much of
those illicit drug profits go to the Taliban, which manage opium in areas under
their control. The group imposes a 10% tax on every link in the drug production
chain, according to a 2008 report from the Afghanistan Research and Evaluation
Unit, an independent research organization in Kabul. That includes the Afghan
farmers who cultivate poppy, the main ingredient in opium, the labs that
convert it into a drug and the traders who move the final product out of
country.
Afghan farmers harvest opium sap from a poppy field in the Darra-i-Nur
District of Nangarhar province May 10. Noorullah Shirzada/AFP via Getty Images
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2. Mining
– $400 Million To $464 Million
Mining iron
ore, marble, copper, gold, zinc and other metals and rare-earth minerals in
mountainous Afghanistan is an increasingly lucrative business for the Taliban.
Both small-scale mineral-extraction operations and big Afghan mining companies
pay Taliban militants to allow them to keep their businesses running. Those who
don’t pay have faced death threats.
According
to the Taliban’s Stones and Mines Commission, or Da Dabaro Comisyoon, the group
earns $400 million a year from mining. NATO estimates that figure higher, at
$464 million – up from just $35 million in 2016.
3. Extortion
and Taxes – $160 Million
Like a
government, the Taliban tax people and industries in the growing swath of
Afghanistan under their control. They even issue official receipts of tax
payment.
“Taxed”
industries include mining operations, media, telecommunications and development
projects funded by international aid. Drivers are also charged for using
highways in Taliban-controlled regions, and shopkeepers pay the Taliban for the
right to do business.
The group
also imposes a traditional Islamic form of taxation called “ushr” – which is a
10% tax on a farmer’s harvest – and “zakat,” a 2.5% wealth tax.
According
to Mullah Yaqoob, tax revenues – which may also be considered extortion – bring
in around $160 million annually.
Since some
of those taxed are poppy growers, there could be some financial overlap between
tax revenue and drug revenue.
4. Charitable
Donations – $240 Million
The Taliban
receive covert financial contributions from private donors and international institutions
across the globe.
Many
Taliban donations are from charities and private trusts located in Persian Gulf
countries, a region historically sympathetic to the group’s religious
insurgency. Those donations add up to about $150 million to $200 million each
year, according to the Afghanistan Center for Research and Policy Studies.
These charities are on the U.S. Treasurey Department’s list of groups that
finance terrorism.
Private
citizens from Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, Iran and some Persian Gulf nations also
help finance the Taliban, contributing another $60 million annually to the
Taliban-affiliated Haqqani Network, according to American counterterrorism
agencies.
The Taliban’s insurgency has destabilized Afghanistan for nearly 20
years. Norrullah Shirzada/AFP via Getty Images
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5. Exports
– $240 Million
In part to
launder illicit money, the Taliban import and export various everyday consumer
goods, according to the United Nations Security Council. Known business
affiliates include the multinational Noorzai Brothers Limited, which imports
auto parts and sells reassembled vehicles and spare automobile parts.
The
Taliban’s net income from exports is thought to be around $240 million a year.
This figure includes the export of poppy and looted minerals, so there may be
financial overlap with drug revenue and mining revenue.
6. Real Estate
– $80 Million
The Taliban
own real estate in Afghanistan, Pakistan and potentially other countries,
according to Mullah Yaqoob and the Pakistani TV Channel SAMAA. Yaqoob told NATO
annual real estate revenue is around $80 million.
7. Specific
Countries
According
to BBC reporting, a classified CIA report estimated in 2008 that the Taliban
had received $106 million from foreign sources, in particular from the Gulf States.
Today, the
governments of Russia, Iran, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia are all believed to
bankroll the Taliban, according to numerous U.S. and international sources.
Experts say these funds could amount to as much as $500 million a year, but it
is difficult to put an exact figure on this income stream.
Building
a Peacetime Budget
For nearly
20 years, the Taliban’s great wealth has financed mayhem, destruction and death
in Afghanistan. To battle its insurgency, the Afghan government also spends
heavily on war, often at the expense of basic public services and economic
development.
A peace
agreement in Afghanistan would allow the government to redirect its scarce
resources. The government might also see substantial new revenue flow in from
legal sectors now dominated by the Taliban, such as mining.
Stability
is additionally expected to attract foreign investment in the country, helping
the government end its dependence on donors like the United States and the
European Union.
There are
many reasons to root for peace in war-scarred Afghanistan. Its financial health
is one of them.
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Hanif
Sufizada is Education and Outreach Program Coordinator, University of Nebraska
Omaha
Original
Headline: The Taliban are megarich – here’s where they get the money they use
to wage war in Afghanistan
Source: The Conversation
URL: https://newageislam.com/radical-islamism-jihad/taliban-militants-afghanistan-grown-richer/d/123724
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