KANDAHAR: A senior Afghan police official regarded as one of
the country’s most powerful men has banned the use of the Pakistani
currency in the key southern province of Kandahar.
The
police chief of Kandahar, Gen Abdul Raziq, said he had declared the use
of the Pakistani rupee in business transactions a crime. But he said he
hadn’t decided on the punishment.
The rupee has been
widely used in Afghanistan’s eastern and southern provinces bordering
Pakistan. The Iranian currency is used in the western border provinces.
“I’m
not against business, but I don’t want any other currency to be used in
our country, especially the Pakistan and Iranian currencies,” Raziq
said on Sunday.
Raziq’s ban came into effect last week. Traders said it had an immediate effect, with the afghani strengthening in recent days.
“This
is very good news, as people have been confused about what currency
they should use and keep,” said Kandahar tribal elder and businessman,
Ahmad Shah Khan. He said the afghani had strengthened to 560 for 1,000
Pakistani rupees, from 630 per 1,000 before the ban.
The
official Central Bank exchange rate on Sunday was 622 per 1,000. The
afghani has also strengthened against the dollar, from 68 to 65 since
the ban was introduced, traders said. The official rate is currently
67.5 afghanis to the dollar.
Azrakhsh Hafizi, the head
of the international relations committee of the Afghan Chamber of
Commerce, welcomed Raziq’s decision and urged officials nationwide to
adopt the ban on foreign currencies. The use of the US dollar in
transactions elsewhere in the country, including the capital Kabul,
should also be banned, Hafizi said.
“The central bank
almost every week buys afghanis in the market in order to maintain the
stability of the Afghan currency but if we used only the Afghan currency
all over the country there would be no need,” he said.
The
Taliban factor Raziq’s move coincides with a cooling of relations
between Afghanistan and Pakistan following the breakdown of a peace
process initiated last year by Afghan President Ashraf Ghani and the
alleged failure by Pakistani authorities to move against Taliban leaders
believed by Kabul to enjoy refuge over the border.
Raziq said the currency ban was in retaliation against Pakistan’s “protection of the Taliban”, a charge Pakistan denies.
“Pakistan
is not only using bombs against us, they use every other tactic they
can to destroy us — and that includes our businessman,” he alleged.
Pakistani authorities held up Afghan goods, including fresh produce, at
border points until the fruit and vegetables rotted, Raziq claimed.
There
are signs that Afghanistan is starting to look elsewhere for imported
products as a way of pressuring Pakistani authorities into complying
with Afghan demands that they force the Taliban into talks to end the
war.
Wheat imports — which totalled 2.4 million tons
last year, according to the US Department of Agriculture — have
traditionally come from Pakistan. But an increase in the customs duty
charged by Afghan authorities has cut imports from Pakistan, with the
business now going to Central Asian states.
Hafizi said
the value of imports from Pakistan had fallen by $700 million since the
start of the current financial year in January.
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