INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Washington&s oversight authority on Afghanistan reconstruction has found that allegations of theft of millions of dollars of cash by former
president Ashraf Ghani and his senior advisors, at the time of their hurried departure, are likely untrue.In the Special Inspector General
for Afghanistan Reconstruction&s (SIGAR) interim report on the theft of funds, which was published on Tuesday, the investigative team found
that while some cash was taken from the grounds of the palace and loaded onto helicopters, that carried Ghani, his wife Rula, and senior
staff members to Uzbekistan, evidence indicates that the amount of cash on board did not exceed $1 million and may have been closer in value
to $500,000.SIGAR also identified suspicious circumstances in which approximately $5 million in cash was allegedly left behind at the
&The origins and purpose of this money are disputed, but it was supposedly divided by members of the Presidential Protective Service& after
the helicopters departed but before the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan (IEA) captured the palace. SIGAR examined other examples of alleged
theft by senior Afghan officials as the government collapsed, including tens of millions of dollars from the operating budget of the
National Directorate of Security.Although there appears to have been ample opportunity and effort to plunder Afghan government coffers, &at
this time SIGAR does not have sufficient evidence to determine with certainty whether hundreds of millions of dollars were removed from the
country by Afghan officials as the government collapsed or whether any stolen money was provided by the United States,& the report
read.According to SIGAR, this is an interim report, as they are still waiting for responses to questions sent to Ghani.If forthcoming, those
answers will be incorporated into a final report,& SIGAR stated.Following the collapse of the former Afghan government, allegations were
made that Ghani and his senior advisors fled Afghanistan with millions of dollars in cash loaded onto the helicopters that carried them from
the presidential palace to Termez, Uzbekistan, on the afternoon of August 15, 2021.The hurried nature of their departure, the emphasis on
passengers over cargo, the payload and performance limitations of the helicopters, and the consistent alignment in detailed accounts from
witnesses on the ground and in the air all suggest that there was little more than $500,000 in cash on board the helicopters,& read the
report. That being said, it is likely that significant amounts of United States currency disappeared from Afghan government property in
the chaos of the Taliban (IEA) takeover & including $5million taken from the presidential palace and tens of millions taken from the vault
at the National Directorate of Security,& SIGAR stated.Attempts to loot other government funds appear to have been common
Yet with Afghan government records and surveillance videos from those final days likely in Taliban (IEA) hands, SIGAR is currently unable to
determine how much money was ultimately stolen, and by whom,& the report stated.The Russian embassy in Kabul asserted in late August that
there was $169 million on board the helicopters, and two days later the Afghan ambassador to Tajikistan, Zahir Aghbar, echoed these claims
in a press conference.Aghbar also vowed to file a request with Interpol to arrest Ghani
However, Aghbar declined to sit for an interview with SIGAR or provide any evidence substantiating this claim.The post SIGAR finds Ghani and
his advisors fled the country with less than $1 million first appeared on Ariana News.