AP – Warning that Afghanistan faces deepening poverty with six million people at risk of famine, the United Nations (UN) humanitarian chief on Monday urged donors to restore funding for economic development and provide USD770 million to help Afghans get through the winter.
Martin Griffiths told the UN Security Council that Afghanistan faces multiple crises – humanitarian, economic, climate and hunger. Conflict, poverty, climate shocks and food insecurity “have long been a sad reality” in Afghanistan, but he said what makes the current situation “so critical” is the halt to large-scale development aid since the Taleban takeover a year ago.
More than half the Afghan population – some 24 million people – need assistance and close to 19 million are facing acute levels of food insecurity, Griffiths said.
And “we worry” that the figures will soon become worse because winter weather will send already high fuel and food prices skyrocketing.
Despite the challenges, he said UN agencies and their non-government organisation partners have mounted “an unprecedented response” over the past year, reaching almost 23 million people.
But he said USD614 million is urgently required to prepare for winter including repairing and upgrading shelters and providing warm clothes and blankets – and an additional USD154 million is needed to preposition food and other supplies before the weather cuts access to certain areas.
Griffiths stressed, however, that “humanitarian aid will never be able to replace the provision of system-wide services to 40 million people across the country”.
The Taleban “have no budget to invest in their own future”, he said, and “it’s clear that some development support needs to be started”. With more than 70 per cent of Afghans living in rural areas, Griffiths warned that if agriculture and livestock production aren’t protected “millions of lives and livelihoods will be risked, and the country’s capacity to produce food imperilled”.
“The consequences of inaction on both the humanitarian and development fronts will be catastrophic and difficult to reverse,” Griffiths warned.
