Khaleej Times

UN fund to provide aid to Afghan people directly

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The United Nations said on Thursday it had set up a special trust fund to provide urgently needed cash directly to Afghans through a system tapping into donor funds frozen since the Taliban takeover in August.

With the local economy “imploding”, the aim is to inject liquidity into Afghan households to permit them to survive this winter and remain in their homeland, it said.

Achim Steiner, the UN Developmen­t Programme’s (UNDP) administra­tor, said Germany, a first contributo­r, had pledged 50 million euros ($58 million) to the fund, and that it was in touch with other donors to mobilise resources.

Some 97 per cent of Afghan households could be living below the poverty line by mid-2022, according to UNDP. “We have to step in, we have to stabilise a ‘people’s economy’ and in addition to saving lives we also have to save livelihood­s,” Steiner told a news briefing.

“Because otherwise we will confront indeed a scenario through this winter and into next year where millions and millions of Afghans are simply unable to stay on their land, in

their homes, in their villages and survive,” he said.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund said on Tuesday that Afghanista­n’s economy was set to contract up to 30 per cent this year and this was likely to further fuel a refugee crisis that would affect neighbouri­ng countries, Turkey and Europe.

The Taliban takeover saw billions in central bank assets frozen and internatio­nal financial institutio­ns suspend access to funds, although humanitari­an aid has continued. Banks are running out of money, civil servants have not been paid and food prices have soared.

Steiner said the challenge was to repurpose donor funds already earmarked for Afghanista­n, where the Taliban, the de facto authoritie­s, are not recognised internatio­nally. The fund allows the internatio­nal community to be “confident enough that these funds are not meant as government-to-government funding”, he

said. The UN has discussed the programmes with the Taliban, he said, noting that 80 per cent of the microbusin­esses being helped were led by women.

“Our greatest challenge right now is that there is a economy in which there is virtually no domestic currency in circulatio­n,” Steiner said, adding that the UN wanted to avoid foreign currencies dominating, which would undermine the economy.

“Our intent is to find ways very quickly in which we can convert internatio­nal support into local currency in order to be able to stimulate local markets, local livelihood­s. This is how you keep an economy alive,” he said.

Kanni Wignaraja, director of UNDP’S regional bureau for the Asia Pacific, said that cash would be provided to Afghan workers in public works programmes, such as drought and flood control programmes, and grants given to micro-enterprise­s. Temporary basic income would be paid to the vulnerable elderly and disabled, she said.

The UNDP had estimated activities to be covered over the first 12 months at approximat­ely $667 million, she said.

 ?? AFP ?? Afghan women chant slogans and hold placard during a women’s rights protest in Kabul on Thursday. The Taliban violently cracked down on media coverage of a women’s rights protest in Kabul, beating several journalist­s. —
AFP Afghan women chant slogans and hold placard during a women’s rights protest in Kabul on Thursday. The Taliban violently cracked down on media coverage of a women’s rights protest in Kabul, beating several journalist­s. —

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