Deccan Chronicle

Af flights start after overnight snow

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Kabul, Dec. 16: Flights to and from Kabul resumed Thursday after hours of delays caused by overnight snow that blanketed the Afghan capital.

Kabul’s streets were largely empty as shop owners, government employees and workers stayed indoors to seek shelter from the freezing weather.

The cold snap has added to Afghanista­n’s woes, with the United Nations and other organisati­ons warning millions will need food and shelter from the country’s harsh winter. “We’re looking at one of the worst humanitari­an crises we’ve ever seen,” the internatio­nal charity Save the Children said.

The NGO’s Afghanista­n country director Nora Hassanien said about 14 million children faced “life threatenin­g” hunger during winter. “This heart-breaking and unjust scenario is being made worse because of sanctions and counter-terror policies, which can disrupt and delay the delivery of lifesaving aid,” she said.

Afghanista­n’s economy, already battered by decades of war, plunged deeper into crisis after billions of dollars in internatio­nal aid was cut off following the takeover by the Taliban on August 15.

Banks have also placed severe restrictio­ns on withdrawal­s by private customers, and many in the capital have resorted to selling household possession­s to buy food for their families. The crisis has also severely hit the local currency, with the Afghani hitting a record-low of

130 to the dollar Monday. It had strengthen­ed to

101 by Thursday after forex traders and the central bank held a meeting to stabilise the local currency. “Decisions were taken to punish those smuggling dollars, and the central bank also promised to intervene in the market as and when needed,” Haji Abdul Rahman Zeerak, spokesman for the Money Exchange Associatio­n said. —

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