An Unlikely Source of Crypto Innovation: Afghanistan

The repressive Taliban government is suspicious of the internet. But a start-up in the country is building blockchain-based tools to transform humanitarian aid.

At a bustling money changer in northwestern Syria, a 46-year-old farmer gripped a plastic card like a lifeline. She had never heard of cryptocurrency, but the card held $500 of it to help restart her farm after nearly 14 years of civil war.

As a teller confirmed the total and cashed out the account, the farmer, Hala Mahmoud Almahmoud, smiled with relief and paused to give thanks. Where had such technology come from, she asked.

The answer surprised her: Afghanistan.

Blockchain-based cash transfers are not the kind of innovation that many people would expect from a country better known for its repressive Taliban leadership, which views the internet with suspicion. But in a nation that has largely turned its back on the world, an Afghan start-up is building tools that it hopes will transform how humanitarian aid is delivered in countries shattered by conflict.

“We’ve lived through these challenges ourselves, so we know how to develop an approach that works,” said Zakia Hussaini, 26, a programmer at the start-up, HesabPay, which designed the technology driving Ms. Almahmoud’s card.

An early proponent of the platform was the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. The agency uses it to support more than 86,000 families in Afghanistan in one of the biggest public blockchain aid initiatives in the world. Mercy Corps, which donated the funds to Ms. Almahmoud, worked with HesabPay to expand its reach to include Syria, and programs for Sudan and Haiti are in development.

In Syria, getting money from abroad can be complicated. Cash is scarce, international banks steer clear of the country and remittance firms like Western Union can charge as much as 10 percent in transfer fees. HesabPay allows organizations like Mercy Corps to sidestep those roadblocks.

Sanzar Kakar, the Afghan American entrepreneur behind HesabPay, used to run Afghanistan’s leading payroll processor. But the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan in 2021 and the Taliban’s return set off a financial collapse. Sanctions put a halt to international transfers, and the central bank unraveled.

To address the country’s increasing financial insecurity, Mr. Kakar turned to blockchain. He built HesabPay, named after the local word for “account,” as a phone-based app that enabled instant transfers from one digital wallet to another, bypassing banks and the Taliban government. The Afghan government has since granted his business a license to operate officially as a financial institution, he said.

Today, the platform has more than 650,000 wallets in Afghanistan, of which about 50,000 are in regular use, moving approximately $60 million a month in stablecoins backed by the afghani, Afghanistan’s currency.

Since February 2025, the U.N. has used HesabPay to deliver nearly $25 million via 80,000 digital wallets to vulnerable Afghans returning home, said Carmen Hett, the corporate treasurer of the U.N. refugee agency. “This helps reduce transaction fees, waiting periods and enhance traceability, real-time monitoring and accountability of transactions,” she said.

It is not surprising that organizations like Mercy Corps and the United Nations are turning to blockchain-based money transfers to deliver aid, said Ric Shreves, an expert in decentralized finance solutions and the president of the Decentralized Cooperation Foundation. For such organizations, he said, “it’s almost all upsides, compared to the way aid has traditionally been delivered.”

But there are still risks, he said, especially when the payment systems are based on local-currency stablecoins, as they are in Afghanistan. (In Syria, the cryptocurrency in HesabPay wallets is backed by the U.S. dollar, a more stable option.) Just as wallets can be shut down for interacting with sanctioned individuals, they can also theoretically be shut down by a country’s central bank for political reasons.

“When we provide people with a nonphysical means of doing transactions, that also means there’s a possibility that those transactions could be blocked through technological means,” Mr. Shreves said. Digital currencies are demonstrably safer than cash, he added, but they still cannot be stashed under a mattress.

In recent years, aid groups have increasingly turned to cash as a fast and dignified form of assistance. But cash has a flaw: It is hard to track. Donors want proof that their money reaches the right hands. Since President Trump slashed U.S. foreign assistance early last year, groups like Mercy Corps have come under even more pressure to demonstrate their impact and integrity.

That is where blockchain comes in, creating a digital trail that records exactly how much was sent, to whom, and where it was spent. That mix of speed and accountability could be “a way to win back trust from those who have come to doubt the usefulness of aid,” said Scott Onder, Mercy Corps’s chief investment officer.

HesabPay comes with additional safeguards, like a real-time dashboard that tracks wallet activity and cross-checks it against international compliance databases. The company says the system is designed to detect illicit activity like terrorist financing, money laundering and online scams, and to raise an alert the moment suspicious transactions appear. For aid donors, it offers a level of oversight rarely possible in fragile states.

During a recent online demonstration, Nigel Pont, the company’s senior adviser for humanitarian affairs, clicked on a purple dot representing a HesabPay agent in Afghanistan. Dozens of pale blue beneficiary wallets fanned out, showing recent transfers. Another click revealed where the money went next. Then one wallet pulsed red with a potential scam alert — an awkward moment in a live demo, but exactly the kind of risk the system is built to expose.

“From an aid donor perspective, that’s immensely valuable,” said Mr. Pont, who previously served as chief strategy officer at Mercy Corps. “A system that can automatically flag a fraud risk means you can check it out immediately instead of waiting six months for a report that somebody stole 20 grand.” No system is entirely corruption-proof, he conceded, but then again, a bag of cash is not, either.

Abdul Halim Hasan, 22, who was waiting in the same line as Ms. Almahmoud for his turn at the money changer in Syria, said he imagined that one day he could use HesabPay as a regular bank account, receiving funds, making payments and saving money safely. But for the moment, it was enough that his HesabPay card allowed him to gain access to money he needed to restart his life after war.

“I certainly want to see this method spread in Syria,” he said.

Leen Rihawi contributed reporting.

An Unlikely Source of Crypto Innovation: Afghanistan
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Donald Trump walks back comments about UK soldiers in Afghanistan

Donald Trump has said UK soldiers who fought in Afghanistan were “among the greatest of all warriors” after previously drawing criticism for his claims that Nato troops stayed away from the frontlines during the conflict.

In a post on social media on Saturday, the US president said: “The great and very brave soldiers of the United Kingdom will always be with the United States of America.

“In Afghanistan, 457 died, many were badly injured, and they were among the greatest of all warriors.

“It’s a bond too strong to ever be broken. The UK military, with tremendous heart and soul, is second to none (except for the USA). We love you all, and always will!”

The post came a day after Trump was criticised for his remarks that Nato allied troops “stayed a little off the frontlines” in Afghanistan.

Keir Starmer raised the comments directly with the US president in a conversation on Saturday, No 10 said.

A Downing Street spokesperson said: “The prime minister spoke to the president of the United States, Donald Trump, this afternoon.

“The prime minister raised the brave and heroic British and American soldiers who fought side by side in Afghanistan, many of whom never returned home. We must never forget their sacrifice, he said.

“As Ukraine approaches the fourth year of war since Russia’s full-scale invasion, the leaders agreed on the need to see progress towards a sustainable ceasefire.

“Whilst diplomatic efforts continue, the prime minister reiterated that international partners must continue to support Ukraine in its defence against [Vladimir] Putin’s barbaric attacks.

“The leaders also discussed the need for bolstered security in the Arctic, and the prime minister said it was an absolute priority for his government.

“The leaders discussed the importance of the UK-US relationship, which continues to stand the test of time. They agreed to speak soon.”

Also on Saturday, Italy’s prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, joined criticism of Trump’s comments on the role of non-US Nato troops in Afghanistan, defending the memory of Italian soldiers killed and wounded there.

“The Italian government was astonished to hear President Trump’s statement claiming that Nato allies ‘fell behind’ during operations in Afghanistan,” Meloni posted on X.

During the nearly 20 years of Nato operations in Afghanistan, she said, “our nation paid a cost that is beyond dispute: 53 Italian soldiers killed and more than 700 wounded”.

“For this reason, statements that downplay the contribution of Nato countries in Afghanistan are unacceptable, especially when they come from an allied Nation,” she added.

Meloni noted that the US had invoked article 5 of the North Atlantic treaty after the 11 September 2001 attacks on the country that killed 3,000 people, in effect launching the Afghanistan campaign.

Article 5 requires Nato member states to defend any of their number who come under attack.

Meloni acknowledged the strong ties between Italy and the US.

“But friendship requires respect, a fundamental condition for continuing to ensure the solidarity at the core of the Atlantic Alliance,” she added.

Earlier on Saturday, Italy’s foreign minister also paid tribute to Italy’s dead and wounded in Afghanistan in an online post.

AFP contributed to this report

Donald Trump walks back comments about UK soldiers in Afghanistan
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Afghanistan Skips ECO Disaster Risk Meeting in Pakistan

Pakistan is hosting a regional gathering today and tomorrow, bringing together senior officials from ECO member countries

ECO Meeting Focuses on Reducing Risks of Natural Disasters

Pakistan is hosting a regional gathering today and tomorrow, bringing together senior officials from ECO member countries, as well as representatives from the ECO Secretariat and regional and international organizations, to discuss ways to reduce the risks posed by natural disasters.

Representatives from several countries, including Turkey, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Iran, Uzbekistan, and Afghanistan have been invited to this two-day meeting.

Seyed Shah Guharpour, a university professor and environmental expert, said: “It’s a good opportunity for a vulnerable country to directly voice its concerns to the participants of the meeting.”

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Islamic Emirate stated that although Afghanistan was invited, it has been decided that no Afghan representative will attend the meeting.

According to the ministry, participation in the meeting was not assessed as beneficial in terms of interests and outcomes.

Seyed Mohammad Suleimankhel, an environmental expert, said: “Afghanistan is among the countries most affected by natural or climate-related disasters, and this meeting in Pakistan highlights many similarities between Afghanistan and neighboring countries in terms of geography and shared natural disasters. Therefore, Afghanistan’s presence was important.”

This comes as Afghanistan has witnessed several major natural events this year, including successive floods in the early months and deadly earthquakes in Kunar and Samangan.

Afghanistan Skips ECO Disaster Risk Meeting in Pakistan
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Ban on Medicine Imports From Pakistan to Take Effect in 20 Days

Khaama Press

Authorities say medicine imports from Pakistan will be banned after February 9, triggering price spikes and concerns over drug supplies nationwide.

The Taliban finance ministry said on Wednesday that a ban on importing medicines from Pakistan will take effect after February 9, ending customs clearance at all border points.

In a statement, the ministry urged traders and pharmaceutical importers to finalize all transactions and documentation within the remaining 19-day grace period.

Abdul Ghani Baradar, the Taliban deputy prime minister for economic affairs, said earlier that medicine imports from Pakistan would be suspended for up to three months following tensions with Islamabad.

Officials said traders should seek alternative supply routes to meet domestic demand, but market reactions have been swift, with medicine prices rising sharply across the country.

Taliban statistics show healthcare and treatment costs have increased by more than 17 percent since the import ban was announced, adding pressure on households.

Afghanistan relies heavily on imported medicines, with Pakistan long serving as a key supplier due to geographic proximity and established trade routes.

Recent border closures and political frictions between the Taliban and Pakistan have disrupted trade flows, affecting food, fuel and medical supplies.

Economists warn that prolonged restrictions could worsen shortages and further inflate healthcare costs, particularly for low-income families.

Aid groups and health experts are calling for exemptions or alternative arrangements to ensure continued access to essential medicines and prevent a wider public health crisis.

Ban on Medicine Imports From Pakistan to Take Effect in 20 Days
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221,000 Earthquake Survivors in Eastern Afghanistan Still Need Urgent Aid

Khaama Press

The UN says 221,000 survivors of eastern Afghanistan’s recent earthquake remain in urgent need of humanitarian assistance amid funding and logistical challenges.

The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) reported on Wednesday that 221,000 people affected by the eastern Afghanistan earthquake still require immediate aid. A total of 499,000 were impacted by the disaster, according to the UN agency.

Despite ongoing relief efforts, response operations have been hampered by severe funding shortages. Only $38 million of the $111.5 million needed for emergency response has been received so far. Many families remain without adequate shelter and essential supplies.

Women and girls face heightened risks, as humanitarian access to vulnerable populations remains limited. Disruptions to aid delivery have compounded these challenges, leaving thousands at increased risk of exposure and deprivation.

Rising tensions between the Taliban and Pakistan have further complicated the crisis. Islamabad has accelerated the deportation of Afghan migrants, while the closure of border crossings has disrupted trade and restricted the movement of relief supplies.

Intermittent internet shutdowns in Afghanistan over the past two days have also hampered communication and coordination among humanitarian agencies, delaying aid distribution and affecting emergency response efforts.

Humanitarian officials warn that without additional funding and access, the situation could worsen, leaving tens of thousands of earthquake survivors without basic necessities and protection.

Aid agencies continue to call on the international community to provide resources and support, stressing that timely assistance is critical to prevent further suffering among the affected populations.

221,000 Earthquake Survivors in Eastern Afghanistan Still Need Urgent Aid
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Trump criticizes Afghanistan exit, says leaving Bagram was a mistake

US President Donald Trump renewed criticism of the Afghanistan withdrawal, calling it America’s weakest moment and blaming Biden for deadly Kabul airport chaos.

Donald Trump said the withdrawal from Afghanistan represented the weakest point in US history, citing the killing of 13 American soldiers in the Kabul airport bombing.

Speaking at the White House on Tuesday, Trump said his administration had also planned to leave Afghanistan but would have done so with strength and dignity.

He claimed that during his presidency the United States projected power, arguing that hostile groups refrained from acting against American forces.

Trump said the US should never have abandoned Bagram Air Base, describing it as a major strategic military installation with vast surrounding territory.

He also criticized the amount of US military equipment left behind, calling it shameful that the Taliban now display American gear in public parades.

The US withdrawal in August 2021 marked the end of America’s longest war after nearly two decades of military presence in Afghanistan.

The chaotic exit followed the rapid collapse of the Afghanistan government, as Taliban forces swept into Kabul amid widespread confusion and panic.

Trump has repeatedly attacked former President Joe Biden over the withdrawal, both before and after returning to the White House, making it a central political issue.

US Defense Department reports estimate that more than $7 billion worth of American military equipment remained in Afghanistan, some of which the Taliban have since repaired and reused.

Trump criticizes Afghanistan exit, says leaving Bagram was a mistake
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UN Rapporteur Urges Recognition of Gender Apartheid in Afghanistan

Khaama Press

UN special rapporteur Richard Bennett called for global backing to recognize gender apartheid in Afghanistan as a crime under international law.

Richard Bennett, the UN Human Rights Council’s special rapporteur for Afghanistan, on Wednesday urged the international community to support formal recognition of gender apartheid in the country.

Bennett referred to a call by UN experts to recognize gender apartheid within a proposed Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of Crimes Against Humanity, stressing the need for legal accountability.

The United Nations is currently holding meetings to draft the new convention, which aims to strengthen international mechanisms to prevent and punish crimes against humanity.

UN experts said meaningful participation by Afghan women and gender justice activists must be guaranteed in upcoming negotiations on the treaty, warning that exclusion would undermine its credibility.

They emphasized that the voices of Afghan women are not merely testimonial, but a primary and reliable source for documenting ongoing repression and crimes.

Gender-based restrictions imposed in Afghanistan have drawn widespread international criticism, with women barred from education, employment, and public life under sweeping decrees.

Human rights groups say these policies amount to systematic discrimination that meets the threshold of gender apartheid under international legal definitions.

Nasir Ahmad Faiq, Afghanistan’s acting permanent representative to the United Nations, also urged recognition of gender apartheid during the UN meeting, aligning Kabul’s UN mission with the experts’ call.

Analysts say formal recognition could increase pressure for accountability and pave the way for stronger legal action against those responsible for widespread rights violations.

UN Rapporteur Urges Recognition of Gender Apartheid in Afghanistan
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Deportations of Afghans from Iran Surge as Protests Subside

According to them, between 1,000 to 2,000 individuals are returning daily through the Islam Qala border crossing.Local o

fficials in Herat say that with the decline of protests in Iran, the deportation of Afghan migrants from the country has increased.

According to them, between 1,000 to 2,000 individuals are returning daily through the Islam Qala border crossing.

Abdul Zahir Rahmani, acting head of the Directorate for Refugees and Repatriations at Islam Qala, stated: “Every day, between one to two thousand people, mostly families, are returning to the country. During the protests in Iran, deportations of families had decreased likely because conditions and opportunities were not favorable for them to make their way to Afghanistan.”

A number of Afghans deported from Iran have spoken about the harsh living conditions for Afghan migrants in that country.

Rahmatullah, who was reunited with his wife and three children at the Islam Qala border after two months, said he had been deported by Iranian police, while his family remained on the other side of the border.

He shared: “After our documents were invalidated, my children were no longer accepted in school, and the cost of living in Iran has risen drastically. I was deported two months ago, and those months were extremely painful for me my family was in Iran, while I was in Afghanistan. These days were incredibly difficult, and it was a huge struggle.”

Several deported migrants say that life became even more difficult for Afghans in Iran during the protests.

They report that pressure from Iranian police has also increased.

Saeed, another deportee, said: “Arrests of Afghan migrants in Iran have increased. Along with beatings, the police take their money. Life for Afghans in Iran is extremely hard. I was badly beaten on my way back to Afghanistan, and most of my money was taken. I was beaten so badly that I can’t walk without help someone has to hold my hand so I can move.”

Mohammad Ismail, another deported migrant, stated: “My 15-year-old son, who is underage, was deported nearly twenty days ago along with my brother. My brother is now in Afghanistan, but his wife and children are still in Iran. Life for Afghans in Iran is extremely difficult. Those who don’t have money are kept in camps for a week to ten days.”

These deported migrants are also deeply concerned about the hardships of life during the cold winter months. They are calling on the government and aid organizations to provide them with employment opportunities and humanitarian assistance.

Deportations of Afghans from Iran Surge as Protests Subside
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Islamic State Claims Deadly Attack on Chinese Restaurant in Afghanistan

A bombing claimed by the Islamic State wing in Afghanistan killed at least seven people and wounded more than a dozen in a Chinese restaurant in Kabul on Monday, officials said, in a sign of the group’s persistent threat despite the Afghan government’s claim to have vanquished it.

The blast ripped through a noodle restaurant on a busy street of central Kabul filled with shops selling flowers, antiquities and rugs on Monday afternoon. A single attacker detonated his explosive vest 30 minutes after entering the restaurant, according to a statement released by the Islamic State through its media wing.

A spokesman for the Afghan Interior Ministry, Abdul Mateen Qani, told The New York Times that seven people had been killed, including a Chinese citizen. He also said that the assault had been carried out by a single attacker from the Islamic State Khorasan Province, or ISIS-K, the group’s Afghanistan affiliate.

Unlike most Western countries, China has maintained sustained diplomatic ties with the Taliban administration in Afghanistan. In 2023, China became the first country to appoint an ambassador in Afghanistan since the Taliban took power in 2021, and has signed mining contracts to tap into vast Afghan oil and mineral reserves. China has also vowed to include Afghanistan in the Belt and Road Initiative, its trillion-dollar global infrastructure project. Its foreign minister, Wang Yi, even visited Kabul last summer.

But China has grown increasingly wary about potential insecurity in Afghanistan, even though the government has control of large areas of the country and has tried to woo foreign investors back. China now advises its citizens against traveling to Afghanistan.

ISIS-K said it has targeted Chinese citizens in retaliation for Beijing’s oppression of Uyghurs, a Muslim ethnic minority in China, and has criticized the Afghan government’s dealings with Beijing. In 2022, its militants injured at least five Chinese citizens in an attack on a hotel popular with Chinese visitors.

“ISIS-K sees the Taliban-China relationship as one of the biggest betrayals of a jihadist group,” Iftikhar Firdous, the executive director of the research platform Khorasan Diary, said about the partnerships made by the Taliban since the group took over Afghanistan in 2021.

Mr. Firdous said the attacks pointed to “a growing anti-Chinese jihadist nexus in the region, of which ISIS-K is the primary benefactor.”

China has urged the Taliban government to engage in “more visible and verifiable actions to dismantle and eliminate all terrorist organizations based in Afghanistan.”

“China strongly condemns and firmly opposes all forms of terrorism and supports Afghanistan and regional countries in jointly combating all forms of terrorist violence,” Guo Jiakun, a spokesman for the Chinese Foreign Ministry, said at a news briefing on Tuesday.

Security forces heavily guarded the area around the Chinese noodle restaurant on Tuesday, as residents were still cleaning broken glass littering the street. Businesses had reopened, with employees in flower shops making bouquets and blood stains still visible on the windows of nearby boutiques.

Emergency, an Italian nonprofit medical group operating in Kabul, said it had received 20 people at its surgical center on Monday, including seven who were dead on arrival. A child was among the dead, Emergency’s country director, Dejan Panic, said in a statement.

Alexandra Stevenson contributed reporting.

Elian Peltier is an international correspondent for The Times, covering Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Islamic State Claims Deadly Attack on Chinese Restaurant in Afghanistan
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China Calls for Protection of Its Citizens Following Kabul Explosion

China urged authorities to protect its citizens in Afghanistan after a deadly explosion struck a Chinese-run hotel in central Kabul city.

China’s foreign ministry said on Tuesday it had formally asked Taliban authorities to take serious measures to ensure the safety of all Chinese citizens, projects, and institutions operating in Afghanistan.

The ministry confirmed that one Chinese national was killed and five others were wounded in the explosion, adding that Beijing expects proper medical treatment for those injured.

Chinese nationals and businesses have increasingly become targets in Afghanistan, as Beijing expands economic engagement while militant groups oppose foreign presence.

In 2022, an attack on a residence housing Chinese citizens in Kabul was also claimed by Islamic State, highlighting recurring security risks despite official assurances.

China said it supports regional efforts to combat terrorism and called for stronger cooperation to prevent further attacks on foreign nationals and diplomatic interests.

Following the attack, Beijing again urged its citizens to avoid traveling to Afghanistan in the near future due to persistent and unpredictable security threats.

The explosion at the Chinese-run hotel in Kabul’s Shahr-e-Naw area killed seven people in total, including six Afghans, and wounded at least 17 others.

Islamic State claimed responsibility for the attack, reinforcing concerns about its continued operational capability and intent to target foreign-linked locations.

The incident underscores ongoing security challenges in Afghanistan and raises fresh questions about the protection of foreign nationals amid repeated militant attacks.

China Calls for Protection of Its Citizens Following Kabul Explosion
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