HesabPay Afghanistan
with UN Partners Emerges as an Unlikely Source of Crypto Innovation
The
repressive Taliban government is suspicious of the internet. But a start-up in the
country is building blockchain-based tools to transform humanitarian aid.
Core
Idea
·
Despite
Taliban suspicion of the internet, an Afghan start-up, HesabPay,
is pioneering blockchain-based tools to deliver humanitarian aid in conflict zones.
How
It Works
·
HesabPay
enables instant digital wallet transfers, bypassing banks and government
restrictions.
·
Aid
recipients receive funds via cards or apps, redeemable at local money changers.
·
Blockchain
ensures traceability, accountability, and fraud detection, addressing donor
concerns about misuse of aid.
Key
Players
·
Founder: Sanzar Kakar, Afghan American entrepreneur,
previously ran Afghanistan’s largest payroll processor.
·
Programmer: Zakia Hussaini, 26, part of the development
team.
·
Partners: United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
(UNHCR), Mercy Corps, with expansion planned for Syria, Sudan, and Haiti.
Scale
& Impact
·
Over
650,000 wallets in Afghanistan; ~50,000 active monthly, moving $60 million
in stablecoins.
·
Since
Feb 2025, UN has delivered $25 million via 80,000 wallets to Afghan returnees.
·
In
Syria, HesabPay bypasses costly remittance fees (up to
10%) and scarce cash supplies.
Advantages
·
Speed
& dignity: Direct
cash aid without intermediaries.
·
Transparency: Digital trail reassures donors.
·
Security: Real-time monitoring, compliance checks,
and fraud alerts.
·
Cost
savings: Lower transaction
fees compared to traditional remittance systems.
Risks
& Challenges
·
Reliance
on local-currency stablecoins (Afghani) poses volatility and political risks.
·
Wallets
could be blocked by central banks or sanctions.
·
Digital
systems, while safer than cash, remain vulnerable to technological shutdowns.
Broader
Significance
·
Blockchain
offers a new model for humanitarian aid delivery, combining efficiency with
oversight.
·
Reflects
how innovation can emerge from unexpected places, even under restrictive regimes.
·
For
recipients like Hala Mahmoud Almahmoud in Syria, HesabPay
provides a lifeline to rebuild lives after war.
Bottom
Line: Afghanistan’s
HesabPay demonstrates how blockchain can revolutionize
humanitarian aid, making transfers faster, cheaper, and more accountable, while
also highlighting risks tied to politics and technology.
[ABS
News Service/24.01.2026]
At
a bustling money changer in northwestern Syria, a 46-year-old farmer gripped a plastic
card like a lifeline. She had never heard of cryptocurrency, but the card held $500
of it to help restart her farm after nearly 14 years of civil war.
As
a teller confirmed the total and cashed out the account, the farmer, Hala Mahmoud
Almahmoud, smiled with relief and paused to give thanks. Where had such technology
come from, she asked.
The
answer surprised her: Afghanistan.
Blockchain-based
cash transfers are not the kind of innovation that many people would expect from
a country better known for its repressive Taliban leadership, which views the internet
with suspicion. But in a nation that has largely turned its back on the world, an
Afghan start-up is building tools that it hopes will transform how humanitarian
aid is delivered in countries shattered by conflict.
“We’ve
lived through these challenges ourselves, so we know how to develop an approach
that works,” said Zakia Hussaini, 26, a programmer at the start-up, HesabPay, which designed the technology driving Ms. Almahmoud’s card.
An
early proponent of the platform was the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees.
The agency uses it to support more than 86,000 families in Afghanistan in one of
the biggest public blockchain aid initiatives in the world. Mercy Corps, which donated
the funds to Ms. Almahmoud, worked with HesabPay to expand its reach to include Syria, and programs
for Sudan and Haiti are in development.
In
Syria, getting money from abroad can be complicated. Cash is scarce, international
banks steer clear of the country and remittance firms like Western Union can charge
as much as 10 percent in transfer fees. HesabPay allows
organizations like Mercy Corps to sidestep those roadblocks.
Sanzar
Kakar, the Afghan American entrepreneur behind HesabPay,
used to run Afghanistan’s leading payroll processor. But the U.S. withdrawal from
Afghanistan in 2021 and the Taliban’s return set off a financial collapse. Sanctions
put a halt to international transfers, and the central bank unraveled.
To
address the country’s increasing financial insecurity, Mr. Kakar turned to blockchain.
He built HesabPay, named after the local word for “account,”
as a phone-based app that enabled instant transfers from one digital wallet to another,
bypassing banks and the Taliban government. The Afghan government has since granted
his business a license to operate officially as a financial institution, he said.
Today,
the platform has more than 650,000 wallets in Afghanistan, of which about 50,000
are in regular use, moving approximately $60 million a month in stablecoins backed
by the afghani, Afghanistan’s currency.
Since
February 2025, the U.N. has used HesabPay to deliver nearly
$25 million via 80,000 digital wallets to vulnerable Afghans returning home, said
Carmen Hett, the corporate treasurer of the U.N. refugee agency. “This helps reduce
transaction fees, waiting periods and enhance traceability, real-time monitoring
and accountability of transactions,” she said.
It
is not surprising that organizations like Mercy Corps and the United Nations are
turning to blockchain-based money transfers to deliver aid, said Ric Shreves, an
expert in decentralized finance solutions and the president of the Decentralized
Cooperation Foundation. For such organizations, he said, “it’s almost all upsides,
compared to the way aid has traditionally been delivered.”
But
there are still risks, he said, especially when the payment systems are based on
local-currency stablecoins, as they are in Afghanistan. (In Syria, the cryptocurrency
in HesabPay wallets is backed by the U.S. dollar, a more
stable option.) Just as wallets can be shut down for interacting with sanctioned
individuals, they can also theoretically be shut down by a country’s central bank
for political reasons.
“When
we provide people with a nonphysical means of doing transactions, that also means
there’s a possibility that those transactions could be blocked through technological
means,” Mr. Shreves said. Digital currencies are demonstrably safer than cash, he
added, but they still cannot be stashed under a mattress.
In
recent years, aid groups have increasingly turned to cash as a fast and dignified
form of assistance. But cash has a flaw: It is hard to track. Donors want proof
that their money reaches the right hands. Since President Trump slashed U.S. foreign
assistance early last year, groups like Mercy Corps have come under even more pressure
to demonstrate their impact and integrity.
That
is where blockchain comes in, creating a digital trail that records exactly how
much was sent, to whom, and where it was spent. That mix of speed and accountability
could be “a way to win back trust from those who have come to doubt the usefulness
of aid,” said Scott Onder, Mercy Corps’s chief investment
officer.
HesabPay
comes with additional safeguards, like a real-time dashboard that tracks wallet
activity and cross-checks it against international compliance databases. The company
says the system is designed to detect illicit activity like terrorist financing,
money laundering and online scams, and to raise an alert the moment suspicious transactions
appear. For aid donors, it offers a level of oversight rarely possible in fragile
states.
During
a recent online demonstration, Nigel Pont, the company’s senior adviser for humanitarian
affairs, clicked on a purple dot representing a HesabPay
agent in Afghanistan. Dozens of pale blue beneficiary wallets fanned out, showing
recent transfers. Another click revealed where the money
went next. Then one wallet pulsed red with a potential scam alert — an awkward moment
in a live demo, but exactly the kind of risk the system is built to expose.
“From
an aid donor perspective, that’s immensely valuable,” said Mr. Pont, who previously
served as chief strategy officer at Mercy Corps. “A system that can automatically
flag a fraud risk means you can check it out immediately instead of waiting six
months for a report that somebody stole 20 grand.” No system is entirely corruption-proof,
he conceded, but then again, a bag of cash is not, either.
Abdul
Halim Hasan, 22, who was waiting in the same line as Ms. Almahmoud
for his turn at the money changer in Syria, said he imagined that one day he could
use HesabPay as a regular bank account, receiving funds,
making payments and saving money safely. But for the moment, it was enough that
his HesabPay card allowed him to gain access to money
he needed to restart his life after war.
“I
certainly want to see this method spread in Syria,” he said.