<p>Afghanistan's Taliban authorities said Saturday they had begun paying government employees who had not received a paycheck since the Islamists seized power and triggered a major financial crisis.</p>.<p>Most government employees have yet to return to work and many had not been paid for months even before the Taliban captured power, especially rural workers.</p>.<p>"We are going to start paying salaries from today. We will pay three months' salaries," Ahmad Wali Haqmal, spokesman for the finance ministry said at a press conference.</p>.<p>Haqmal said salaries will be paid for the period starting August 23, adding that some government employees will be paid even for the month before the Taliban took power.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/taliban-ask-us-congress-to-unfreeze-afghanistan-assets-1051797.html" target="_blank">Taliban ask US Congress to unfreeze Afghanistan assets</a></strong></p>.<p>The payment will be made through the country's banking system which Haqmal said had not been "paralysed" since the fall of the previous government.</p>.<p>"It just needs time to operate normally," he said.</p>.<p>The government employees will still be unable to access their full salaries.</p>.<p>Since August, Afghanistan's banking sector has collapsed, and those with money in the bank have struggled to access their funds as branches curtailed withdrawals to $200 to $400 a week.</p>.<p>The financial crunch was aggravated after Washington froze about $10 billion of assets held in its reserve for Kabul and deteriorated further after the World Bank and International Monetary Fund halted Afghanistan's access to funding.</p>.<p>Foreign donors led by the United States provided more than 75 percent of the public expenditure under Afghanistan's previous 20-year Washington-backed government.</p>.<p>The rapidly worsening situation has forced Afghans to sell their household goods to raise money for food and other essentials with the local currency crashing and prices skyrocketing.</p>.<p>Meraj Mohammad Meraj, the spokesman for the government's revenue department, said the authorities were in a position to pay salaries after earning revenues of 26 billion Afghanis (around $277 million) in the past two and half months.</p>.<p>"Only 20 to 25 percent of the economy was operational... Not all sectors are currently operational," Meraj said at the press conference.</p>.<p>He added that the authorities will introduce a new Islamic tax to fund aid projects for poor people and orphans.</p>.<p><strong>Check out latest DH videos here</strong></p>
<p>Afghanistan's Taliban authorities said Saturday they had begun paying government employees who had not received a paycheck since the Islamists seized power and triggered a major financial crisis.</p>.<p>Most government employees have yet to return to work and many had not been paid for months even before the Taliban captured power, especially rural workers.</p>.<p>"We are going to start paying salaries from today. We will pay three months' salaries," Ahmad Wali Haqmal, spokesman for the finance ministry said at a press conference.</p>.<p>Haqmal said salaries will be paid for the period starting August 23, adding that some government employees will be paid even for the month before the Taliban took power.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/taliban-ask-us-congress-to-unfreeze-afghanistan-assets-1051797.html" target="_blank">Taliban ask US Congress to unfreeze Afghanistan assets</a></strong></p>.<p>The payment will be made through the country's banking system which Haqmal said had not been "paralysed" since the fall of the previous government.</p>.<p>"It just needs time to operate normally," he said.</p>.<p>The government employees will still be unable to access their full salaries.</p>.<p>Since August, Afghanistan's banking sector has collapsed, and those with money in the bank have struggled to access their funds as branches curtailed withdrawals to $200 to $400 a week.</p>.<p>The financial crunch was aggravated after Washington froze about $10 billion of assets held in its reserve for Kabul and deteriorated further after the World Bank and International Monetary Fund halted Afghanistan's access to funding.</p>.<p>Foreign donors led by the United States provided more than 75 percent of the public expenditure under Afghanistan's previous 20-year Washington-backed government.</p>.<p>The rapidly worsening situation has forced Afghans to sell their household goods to raise money for food and other essentials with the local currency crashing and prices skyrocketing.</p>.<p>Meraj Mohammad Meraj, the spokesman for the government's revenue department, said the authorities were in a position to pay salaries after earning revenues of 26 billion Afghanis (around $277 million) in the past two and half months.</p>.<p>"Only 20 to 25 percent of the economy was operational... Not all sectors are currently operational," Meraj said at the press conference.</p>.<p>He added that the authorities will introduce a new Islamic tax to fund aid projects for poor people and orphans.</p>.<p><strong>Check out latest DH videos here</strong></p>