🇦🇫 Is Afghanistan being cut off from the world? | The Stream



Millions of people across Afghanistan are facing severe hunger nearly four months after the Taliban took power, a humanitarian crisis set to deepen with the onset of the approaching winter. The World Food Programme estimates that about 24 million people in Afghanistan – 60 percent of the country’s population – are facing “acute hunger”, as the country’s most severe drought in decades intensifies and an economic crisis worsens. The World Bank announced on December 10 that international donors to the Afghan Reconstruction Trust Fund (ARTF) have agreed to release $280m in aid to UNICEF and the World Food Programme in order “to provide humanitarian assistance to the people of Afghanistan at this critical time". But the United States is continuing to freeze $9.5 billion in Afghan central bank assets held in US banks, a block imposed soon after the Taliban took control of the Afghan capital Kabul on August 15 amid a chaotic withdrawal of US-led foreign forces. The International Monetary Fund and World Bank also halted Afghanistan’s government from access to its funds in August, saying they were concerned about the Taliban's running of the country and its human rights record. With Afghanistan now isolated from funding and banking channels, aid agencies in Afghanistan are struggling to pay local staff to provide essential help to communities. The president of the International Committee of the Red Cross says: “The main problem in Afghanistan is not hunger. The main problem is the lack of cash to pay salaries to deliver social services which have existed before.” Now thousands of people facing destitution are now leaving their homes – with many crossing the border into Iran. They are among more than 700,000 people displaced by conflict, natural disasters, and the burgeoning economic emergency in 2021 alone. Afghanistan’s Taliban-led government is continuing to call for formal recognition by the United Nations, but on December 1 the General Assembly deferred a decision on who will be the rightful representatives of Afghanistan to the world body. UN member countries are urging the Taliban to dramatically improve human rights and ensure that the country’s leadership is more representative. In this episode of The Stream we’ll look at the challenges facing people across Afghanistan as winter nears, and ask what domestic and international action it will take to tackle a humanitarian disaster growing more critical by the day. Join the conversation: TWITTER: https://twitter.com/AJStream FACEBOOK: http://www.facebook.com/AJStream Subscribe to our channel http://bit.ly/AJSubscribe #aljazeeraenglish
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