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Runaway Afghan President Ashraf Ghani denies rumors he fled with load of cash

Runaway Afghan President Ashraf Ghani spoke publicly Wednesday for the first time since he left his country in the hands of the Taliban — and he denied reports that he fled with millions of dollars stuffed inside suitcases.

Speaking in a video from the United Arab Emirates, where he was welcomed on “humanitarian grounds” following his Sunday escape, Ghani maintained that he left Kabul with just the clothes on his back.

“I was forced to leave Afghanistan with one set of traditional clothes, a vest and the sandals I was wearing,” he said in the Facebook clip.

The Russian embassy in Kabul has claimed that Ghani quietly skipped town with four vehicles and a helicopter full of cash as the Taliban approached.

Meanwhile, Afghanistan’s ambassador to Tajikistan on Wednesday accused the exiled leader of stealing $169 million from state coffers.

Afghan President Ashraf Ghani makes an address about the latest developments in the country from exile in United Arab Emirates.
Afghan President Ashraf Ghani denied reports that he fled the country with millions of dollars. via REUTERS

Ambassador Mohammad Zahir Aghbar blasted Ghani’s flight as “a betrayal of the state and the nation” and called on international police to arrest him.

In his video address Wednesday Ghani slammed the claims he left loaded with money as “completely baseless,” adding it was a “political and personality assassination.”

“You can find out from custom officials and other authorities that they were baseless,” he said of the allegations.

Ghani, 72, reiterated that he had left in order to spare the country more bloodshed — and said the Taliban would have hung him had he stayed.

“For now, I am in the Emirates so that bloodshed and chaos is stopped,” he said.

Politicians and experts, however, say his sudden departure hampered negotiations for a smooth transfer of power with the Taliban — and that Ghani left his own people in the lurch, facing chaos and dread about a return to the militant group’s brutal rule.

Ghani on Wednesday said he supported the negotiations between top Afghan officials and the Taliban, saying he was making efforts to “safeguard the rule of Afghans over our country,” without offering details.He maintained that he had “no intention” of remaining in exile in the UAE and that he was “in talks” to return home.

With Post wires