Afghan President Hamid Karzai admitted yesterday that his chief of staff had received “bags of money” from Iran, but insisted the payment was transparent and a form of aid from a friendly country.
Cash payments “are done by various friendly countries to help the president’s office ... this is transparent,” Karzai told a press conference.
The New York Times reported on Saturday that Karzai’s chief of staff, Umar Daudzai, received regular cash payments from Iran, which is reportedly trying to expand its influence in the presidential palace in Kabul.
Karzai angrily rejected the reports that the payments were secret.
“This is nothing hidden. We are grateful for Iranian help in this regard. The United States is doing the same thing. They’re providing cash to some of our offices,” he said.
Asked if the money came in bags as reported he said: “It does give bags of money yes, yes it does ... it’s all the same, let’s not make this an issue.”
He said Iran has assisted his government with up to 700,000 euros (US$980,000) once or twice a year in the form of official aid.
“He [Daudzai] is receiving the money on my instructions,” Karzai said.
The Times, citing unnamed Afghan officials, said the payments total millions of dollars and go into a secret fund that Daudzai and Karzai have used to pay Afghan lawmakers, tribal elders and even Taliban commanders to secure their loyalty.
“It’s basically a presidential slush fund,” one Western official is quoted by the paper as saying. “Daudzai’s mission is to advance Iranian interests.”
Thousands of Pentagon files leaked in July indicated that Iran is funding the Taliban. Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad denied those charges.
Answering a question on what the Iranian authorities wanted in return for their payments, Karzai replied angrily that they wanted good relations.
“They want good relations in return. Lots of other things in return, Afghanistan and Iran have neighborly relations,” he said. “We have also asked lots of things in return in this relationship, so it’s a relationship between neighbors and it will go on and we’ll continue to ask for cash help from Iran.”
The Times had reported that both Daudzai and Karzai had declined to respond to written questions about their relationship with Iran.
The Iranian embassy in Kabul yesterday dismissed the newspaper’s report as “ridiculous and insulting.”
The Times cites unnamed -officials as saying that the Iranian payments are intended to secure the allegiance of Daudzai, a former ambassador to Iran who consistently advocates an anti-Western line to Karzai and briefs Karzai daily.
Last August, when Karzai wrapped up a visit to Iran, Feda Hussein Maliki, the Iranian ambassador in Kabul, brought to the presidential plane a plastic bag filled with euro bills and handed it to Daudzai, according to the report.
Mohammad Ali Qanezadeh, director of the Iranian foreign ministry’s Asia department, said Tehran was spending hundreds of millions of dollars in Afghanistan for children’s education and reconstruction.
In other developments, about 25 people may have been killed in a NATO airstrike in Helmand Province yesterday, an Afghan official said.
NATO officials confirmed there had been an airstrike in Helmand, but said initial reports indicated that there were no civilian casualties. The coalition was continuing to look into the operation, the officials said.
The head of Helmand’s provincial council, Fazal Bari, said local officials had told him that 25 people had been killed but that the casualty figures could rise because many bodies were still buried in the rubble.
He said the dead were inside a mosque in Baghran district, but NATO says it has no reports of a mosque being struck.
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