Penticton Herald

Afghans add hunger crisis to list of challenges

- By KATHY GANNON and RAHIM FAIEZ

KABUL, Afghanista­n — Food could run out this month in Afghanista­n, a senior U.N. official warned Wednesday, threatenin­g to add a hunger crisis to the challenges facing the country’s new Taliban rulers as they endeavor to restore stability after decades of war.

About one third of the country’s population of 38 million is facing “emergency” or “crisis” levels of food insecurity, according to Ramiz Alakbarov, the local U.N. humanitari­an coordinato­r. With winter coming and a severe drought ongoing, more money is needed to feed the population, he said.

The U.N.’s World Food Program has brought in food and distribute­d it to tens of thousands of people in recent weeks. But of the $1.3 billion needed for aid efforts, only 39% has been received, he said.

“The lean winter season is fast approachin­g, and without additional funding, food stocks will run out at the end of September,” Alakbarov said.

The Taliban, who seized control of the country ahead of the withdrawal of American forces this week, now must govern a nation that relies heavily on internatio­nal aid and is in the midst of a worsening economic crisis. In addition to the concerns about food supplies, civil servants haven’t been paid in months and the local currency is losing value. Most of Afghanista­n’s foreign reserves are held abroad and currently frozen.

Mohammad Sharif, a shopkeeper in the capital of Kabul, said that shops and markets there have supplies, but a major concern is rising food prices.

“If the situation continues like this and there is no government to control the prices, that will cause so many problems for local people,” he said.

In the wake of the U.S. pullout, many Afghans are anxiously waiting to see how the Taliban will rule. When they were last in power, before being driven out by the U.S.-led invasion in 2001, they imposed draconian restrictio­ns, refusing to allow girls to go to school, largely confining women to their homes and banning television, music and even photograph­y.

But more recently, their leaders have sought to project a more moderate image. Schools have reopened to boys and girls, though Taliban officials have said they will study separately. Women are out on the streets wearing Islamic headscarve­s — as they always have — rather than the all-encompassi­ng burqa the Taliban required in the past.

The challenges the Taliban face in reviving the economy could give Western nations leverage as they push the group to fulfill a pledge to form an inclusive government and guarantee women’s rights. The Taliban say they want to have good relations with other countries, including the United States.

Many Afghans fear the Taliban won’t make good on those pledges and also are concerned that the nation’s economic situation holds little opportunit­y. Tens of thousands sought to flee the country as a result in a harrowing airlift.

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