A United States judge has ruled that family members of victims of the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks are not entitled to funds from Afghanistanโs central bank.
In the ruling on Tuesday, US District Judge George Daniels said that awarding the families money seized from the Da Afghanistan Bank (DAB) would require an assessment that the Taliban is the legitimate government of Afghanistan, a decision he was โconstitutionally restrainedโ from making.
โThe judgment creditors are entitled to collect on their default judgments and be made whole for the worst terrorist attack in our nationโs history, but they cannot do so with the funds of the central bank of Afghanistan,โ Daniels wrote.
โThe Taliban โ not the former Islamic Republic of Afghanistan or the Afghan people โ must pay for the Talibanโs liability in the 9/11 attacks,โ he added.
In February 2022, the administration of US President Joe Biden issued a controversial executive order stating it would split $7bn in frozen assets from Afghanistanโs central bank between the Afghan people and families of 9/11 victims who sued the Taliban.
While the Taliban was not directly involved in the attacks, lawyers for the families argued it had helped enable al-Qaeda, which mounted the attack, by allowing the group to operate in Afghanistan.
Bilal Askaryar, an Afghan-American activist, told Al Jazeera at the time of the order that the Afghan people โhad nothing to do with 9/11โ and called the decision a โtheft of public funds from an impoverished nationโ.
Tuesdayโs ruling upholds a previous decision in August 2022, when US Magistrate Judge Sarah Netburn also recommended that victims of 9/11 could not seize cash from the Afghan central bank to satisfy court judgements against the Taliban. (AlJazeera)