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Taliban bans crypto and arrest dealers of tokens

Taliban bans crypto and arrest dealers of tokens

According to a senior police officer, the Taliban government has arrested many dealers who disobeyed orders to halt selling digital tokens after the central bank of Afghanistan this month issued a statewide ban on cryptocurrencies.

The crackdown comes after some Afghans turned to cryptocurrencies to preserve their wealth and keep it out of the Taliban’s reach. Crypto has become a popular way of moving money in and out of the country, which is shut off from the global banking system due to sanctions leveled on the militant group. 

While countries from Singapore to the US are tightening crypto regulations in the wake of a market crash that wiped out some $2 trillion of wealth and drove several high-profile firms into bankruptcy, outright bans are much rarer. Afghanistan now joins China, which declared all crypto transactions illegal in September 2021. 

“The central bank gave us an order to stop all money changers, individuals, and businesspeople from trading fraudulent digital currencies like what is commonly referred to as Bitcoin,” Sayed Shah Saadaat, head of criminal investigations at the police headquarters in Herat, said by phone. 

Saadaat said 13 people were arrested, most of whom were released on bail, while more than 20 crypto-related businesses have been shut down in Herat, Afghanistan’s third-largest city and a hub for trading in digital tokens. Four of the six crypto brokerages in Afghanistan are located in the city, some 75 miles (121 kilometers) away from the Iranian border. 

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The Taliban in February said they’d study whether digital tokens can be allowed under Islamic financial practices, as they were looking at all options to revive the economy, which collapsed after last year’s messy withdrawal of US forces paved the way for the Taliban to seize control. 

Some religious scholars had long predicted that the Taliban would end up banning crypto because it’s considered “haram,” or forbidden to Muslims as it has elements of wagering and uncertainty. However, other Muslim-majority countries have taken a more lenient approach. The United Arab Emirates allow crypto trading in Dubai’s free zone, while Bahrain have backed digital assets since 2019.


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