• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Drought leaves Afghans hungry as economic collapse looms – U.N.

September 2, 2021 by David Barret Leave a Comment

September 2, 2021

(Refiles to insert missing word ‘amid’ in lede paragraph)

By Stephanie Nebehay

GENEVA (Reuters) – Many Afghans were struggling to feed their families amid severe drought well before Taliban militants seized power last month and millions may now face starvation with the country isolated and the economy unravelling, aid agencies say.

“In the current context there are no national safety nets…Since the 15th of August (when the Taliban took over), we have seen the crisis accelerate and magnify with the imminent economic collapse that is coming this country’s way,” Mary-Ellen McGroarty, World Food Programme country director in Afghanistan, told Reuters by videolink from Kabul.

In an August video provided by the WFP, Afghan women wearing head to toe-covering burqas and men in turbans line up for supplies at a U.N. food distribution centre in the northern city of Mazar-i-Sharif. A bearded man leaves carrying a sack of 46 kilos (101.4 pounds) of fortified wheat flour on his back.

“There are no crops, no rain, no water and people are living in misery. This is a great mercy from God and it really helps poor and needy people,” Delawar, who lives in Balkh province whose capital is Mazar, says in the video after getting rations for his family of eight.

Food prices have spiked since the second drought in four years ruined some 40% of the wheat crop, according to the WFP.

Millions of Afghans could soon face starvation due to the combination of conflict, drought and COVID-19, it has said. It has urgently appealed for $200 million, warning that WFP supplies will run out by October as winter sets in.

“The situation that we have unfolding at the moment is absolutely horrendous and could morph into just a humanitarian catastrophe,” said McGroarty.

“The Taliban depend on the U.N. and they know it – they can’t feed the population,” said another U.N. official who has worked in Afghanistan but declined to be identified.

Moreover, civil servants’ salaries are not being paid, the currency has depreciated, and banks have limited weekly withdrawals to $200 since the Taliban takeover, McGroarty said.

WFP has maintained operations throughout Afghanistan and has been able to import food from Uzbekistan and Pakistan, reaching 200,000 people with supplies in the past two weeks, she said, and hopes to restore an air bridge to Kabul airport.

‘PALLOR AND PAIN’

McGroarty, an Irish aid veteran, has met some of the 550,000 Afghans uprooted by fighting and drought this year, now living in makeshift tents. In June, she visited food centres in Mazar that distribute wheat flour, oil, lentils and salt.

“I just see the grey and the pallor and the pain in their faces as now they have to put their hands out for something to be able to feed their children,” she said.

McGroarty, recalling Afghanistan’s 2017-2018 drought, said: “People are again faced with no food in the larder, no food to put on the table, having to sell the little bit of assets or livestock that they have to try to survive.”

A lack of both snow and rainfall has left “fields of dust” in drought-hit Mazar and Herat to the west, she said, adding: “So it’s just a tapestry of one crisis on top of the other.”

Malnutrition already affects one in two children under the age of five in Afghanistan, where 14 million people or one-third of the population faces “acute food insecurity”, the WFP says.

Its latest assessment says that 15 of Afghanistan’s 34 provinces showed less food consumption in the last month, the worst-hit being Ghazni, Khost, and Paktika in the east.

“While a refugee outflow is not an immediate likelihood, food shortages, further insecurity and economic downturn could hasten such a scenario in Afghanistan,” it said.

Christine Cipolla, the International Committee of the Red Cross’s regional director for Asia and the Pacific, said that fighting, drought and damage to essential services had triggered internal displacement.

Critical infrastructure in Kunduz, Kandahar, and Lashkar Gah has been destroyed, she told Reuters. “We have seen attacks on medical facilities, civilian homes, electricity supply, water supply systems – and all that will need to be repaired.”

(Reporting by Stephanie Nebehay; Editing by Mark Heinrich)

Source Link Drought leaves Afghans hungry as economic collapse looms – U.N.

David Barret
David Barret

Related posts:

  1. LG B1 OLED price, release date and specs
  2. These stylish wireless speakers might be the slimmest we’ve ever seen
  3. Stocks bulls slow their charge, bitcoin back above $50,000
  4. Lost hope: Ortega’s crackdown in Nicaragua stirs fast-growing exodus

Filed Under: News

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

  • Whales Living To 200 May Actually Be The Norm – There’s A Sad Reason Why We Don’t Know Yet
  • IFLScience The Big Questions: Can Magic Be Used As A Tool In Science?
  • Sheep And… Rhinos? There’s A Very Cute Reason You See Them Hanging Out Together
  • Why Does The Latest Sunrise Of The Year Not Fall On The Winter Solstice?
  • Real Or Fake Christmas Trees: Which Is Better For The Environment?
  • “Cosmic Dipole Anomaly” Suggests That Our Universe May Be “Lopsided”, Seriously Challenging Our Understanding Of The Cosmos
  • Which Animals Mate For Life?
  • Why Is Rainbow Mountain So Vibrantly Colorful?
  • “It’s An Incredible Feeling”: Salty Air Bubbles In 1.4-Billion-Year-Old Crystals Reveal Secrets Of Earth’s Early Atmosphere
  • These Were Some Of The Most Significant Scientific Experiments Of 2025
  • Want To Know What 2026 Has In Store? The Mesopotamians Have A Tip, But You’re Not Going To Like It
  • Can Woolly Bear Caterpillars Predict Winter Weather? No – But They Do Have A Clever Way To Survive The Freeze
  • Is Showering More Hygienic Than Bathing – What Does The Science Say?
  • Why Is Christmas Called Xmas?
  • Stardust Didn’t Reach The Solar System The Way We Thought, So How Did It Get Here?
  • This Might Be The First Time We’ve Ever Seen A Gravitational Wave Event Gravitationally Lensed
  • Carnivorous, Enormous, And Corpse-Scented: What Are The Rarest Plants On Earth?
  • What Are Nieves Penitentes? The Strange Icy Spikes Found In Some Of Earth’s Most Alien Landscapes
  • What Killed One Of The World’s Biggest Crocs? A Necropsy Of Cassisus Suggests A Hidden Killer
  • Avi Loeb Says Interstellar Object 3I/ATLAS Is “Most Likely Natural” As It Heads Away From Earth
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version