After the U.S. military withdrew from Afghanistan in August 2021 the Taliban seized control of the country. In response the International Monetary Fund and major international donors to the country blocked the Taliban’s access to billions of dollars in charitable bank accounts. More than half of Afghanistan’s annual $5 billion budget is from foreign aid. Despite its puritanical brand of Islam, the Taliban controls the world’s largest opium operation, earning about $460 million a year from taxes on the sale of heroin moving through their territories alone, the U.N. says.…
Read more14% Yes |
86% No |
14% Yes |
86% No |
See how support for each position on “Taliban Financial Aid” has changed over time for 1.8k Australia voters.
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See how importance of “Taliban Financial Aid” has changed over time for 1.8k Australia voters.
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Unique answers from Australia users whose views extended beyond the provided choices.
@8ZY8F2Z2yrs2Y
No simple answer to such a complex question
@8YWR28C2yrs2Y
Yes but it has to be conditional based on them spending it on the people. Ideally bypass the Taliban and give it directly to the people
@97ZSZB21yr1Y
No, they’re a terrorism organisation that just so happens to now control the country. We should not support the Taliban nor it’s government
@96KT6HS2yrs2Y
I think that it should only go to people who arent in the Taliban or tied to the Taliban those because if we do nothing people will die
@96JVF5W2yrs2Y
Only in Haseul is chill with it
@966YWRS2yrs2Y
Yes, but with a large number of stipulations they must follow to get the monetary aid.
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