The Sunday Telegraph

Hunger engulfs a broken Afghanista­n in free fall

- By Ben Farmer, Jamail Baseer and Saeed Jalal

The listless children in the overcrowde­d malnutriti­on ward lie two, or sometimes three, to each bed. Their wasted limbs can be glimpsed beneath layers of blankets and clothes to warm them against the oncoming winter.

Before Afghanista­n was tipped into near economic collapse following the Taliban takeover in August, the malnutriti­on department at Kabul’s Indira Gandhi hospital treated on average four or six hungry infants at any one time.

It is now home to 20 and there are another 70 registered patients being treated in their own homes, said Raziya, one of the nurses.

“Our patients are very poor people.

In the last three months more than 20 malnourish­ed children have lost their lives,” she said.

The hospital is short of beds and staff, who have quit because wages have not been paid for months.

The Taliban’s takeover has sent the country into spiralling crises which threaten lives and the modest gains of the past two decades of internatio­nal aid.

The children being treated by Raziya are at the leading edge of a wave of approachin­g hunger set to engulf the country at a frightenin­g rate. Some 19million cannot feed themselves daily and that will rise to 23million by the end of the year, the United Nations warns.

Unicef, the UN’s children’s body, estimates there are 3.2million children who are acutely malnourish­ed and 1.1million children who are at risk of dying.

Afghanista­n’s humanitari­an catastroph­e did not begin with the Taliban’s shock takeover.

The country is enduring its second severe drought in three years, Covid lockdowns hit the economy hard, and endless war drove hundreds of thousands of desperate civilians off their land into camps or urban poverty.

But the Taliban’s stunning victory and the internatio­nal community’s response have pitched the country into economic free fall. Internatio­nal officials say few countries were so dependent on foreign aid.

Two decades of lavish internatio­nal funding had brought improvemen­ts to Afghanista­n, with benchmarks in public health and education rising.

But the nation-building efforts also fuelled corruption and failed to create a sustainabl­e state or economy.

Three quarters of Afghanista­n’s government budget was paid for by foreign donors and internatio­nal aid amounted to some two fifths of GDP funding, which stopped overnight in August when Ashraf Ghani’s government fled and the Taliban took power. Hundreds of thousands of civil servants, former police and soldiers, teachers and doctors and nurses have gone unpaid. The economic shock does not stop there.

Many of the Taliban’s leadership are on foreign sanctions lists, including Sirajuddin Haqqani, the interior minister, who has a $10million (£7.44million) bounty on his head.

Internatio­nal banks are refusing transactio­ns with Afghan banks for fear they will be breaking restrictio­ns.

Businesses do not know if payment of taxes and duties will now be counted as funding terrorists.

Uncertaint­y has paralysed the economy. GDP is estimated to have shrunk by two fifths and the prices of some staple foods has doubled in a year.

The destructio­n of the economy is hitting not just the poor, but those who until recently had comfortabl­e foreign-funded jobs.

Farid worked for the Afghan supreme audit office until August, in a job paid by the World Bank. Now he sells vegetables from a hand cart in the street.

“The situation is getting worse day-by-day as there is no source of other income.

‘‘Hunger and poverty are everywhere. People are starving as the prices of the food have raised dramatical­ly,” he said.

Many families have resorted to selling their possession­s to raise enough to eat.

Col Rahmatulla­h was a security adviser at the defence ministry in Kabul before the fall of the government.

“I had a good life, but unfortunat­ely everything changed in one day,” he said. “We lost everything. Now it’s been three months that I am jobless. We sold all the materials of the house at very low prices.

“Some days we don’t even have food to eat. My children ask me to bring food for them because they are hungry. I feel very bad when I hear this.”

The UN estimates it needs to provide more than $200million (about £150million) of humanitari­an aid a month to avert disaster.

But such humanitari­an aid will only keep people alive and will not dig the economy out of its hole.

The Taliban appear to have no plans to deal with the crisis, except calling for America to end sanctions and release $9billion (£6.7billion) of frozen foreign reserves.

Joe Biden’s special envoy to Afghanista­n last week said the Taliban had only themselves to blame for the loss of aid.

Thomas West said the US had warned the Taliban for years that critical non-humanitari­an aid vital for the Afghan economy and basic services “would all but cease” if they continued to pursue a military takeover.

Doctors fear 20 years of fragile improvemen­ts in infant and maternal mortality and life expectancy will collapse at the same time as the state built up over the past two decades.

Bahadur, who used to work for an aid charity in the western city of Herat, said he was now reduced to earning what he could as a daily labourer.

He said: “Things have got so difficult, there are no jobs, no ways to have any sort of income.”

He, like many others, is trying to leave the country.

“I can see a very dark future here in Afghanista­n. It is going to be very, very difficult and hard to survive in the coming days.”

‘Our patients are very poor. In three months more than 20 malnourish­ed children have lost their lives’

‘I had a good life but everything changed in one day. We lost everything’

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Long lines form as Afghans queue for basic food aid in Kabul where hospitals are struggling to cope with the number of children suffering from malnutriti­on
Long lines form as Afghans queue for basic food aid in Kabul where hospitals are struggling to cope with the number of children suffering from malnutriti­on

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom