The Prague Post - Despite war's end, Afghanistan remains deep in crisis: UN relief chief

EUR -
AED 4.168164
AFN 81.122003
ALL 98.671748
AMD 442.507784
ANG 2.045256
AOA 1039.486014
ARS 1330.848211
AUD 1.773251
AWG 2.042657
AZN 1.926696
BAM 1.952865
BBD 2.290698
BDT 137.842863
BGN 1.955708
BHD 0.427723
BIF 3330.66653
BMD 1.13481
BND 1.482299
BOB 7.839358
BRL 6.442276
BSD 1.134515
BTN 95.879457
BWP 15.530935
BYN 3.712786
BYR 22242.270527
BZD 2.278916
CAD 1.565186
CDF 3260.308462
CHF 0.934079
CLF 0.028143
CLP 1079.987008
CNY 8.251598
CNH 8.245499
COP 4792.630546
CRC 573.048978
CUC 1.13481
CUP 30.072458
CVE 110.785823
CZK 24.956731
DJF 201.678683
DKK 7.46513
DOP 66.783843
DZD 150.490527
EGP 57.684641
ERN 17.022146
ETB 149.624398
FJD 2.563478
FKP 0.847022
GBP 0.850494
GEL 3.115014
GGP 0.847022
GHS 17.374125
GIP 0.847022
GMD 81.12789
GNF 9821.777978
GTQ 8.737025
GYD 238.076438
HKD 8.801323
HNL 29.306411
HRK 7.531772
HTG 148.219882
HUF 404.72981
IDR 18794.718596
ILS 4.130616
IMP 0.847022
INR 96.011541
IQD 1486.600734
IRR 47789.683388
ISK 145.68677
JEP 0.847022
JMD 179.600115
JOD 0.804804
JPY 162.176785
KES 146.956976
KGS 99.239097
KHR 4541.507987
KMF 490.521187
KPW 1021.285951
KRW 1617.325186
KWD 0.347728
KYD 0.945496
KZT 582.210503
LAK 24534.58653
LBP 101622.210291
LKR 339.615645
LRD 226.422901
LSL 21.061893
LTL 3.350798
LVL 0.686435
LYD 6.190405
MAD 10.510891
MDL 19.47408
MGA 5117.991652
MKD 61.511705
MMK 2382.410181
MNT 4054.992006
MOP 9.064638
MRU 45.0803
MUR 51.247972
MVR 17.478028
MWK 1970.029319
MXN 22.240501
MYR 4.896707
MZN 72.63943
NAD 21.061928
NGN 1819.134185
NIO 41.638687
NOK 11.795711
NPR 153.412255
NZD 1.911269
OMR 0.436821
PAB 1.134515
PEN 4.160783
PGK 4.57385
PHP 63.284908
PKR 318.938443
PLN 4.283884
PYG 9086.585797
QAR 4.132407
RON 4.977387
RSD 117.152104
RUB 93.053547
RWF 1608.025374
SAR 4.25663
SBD 9.488482
SCR 16.141929
SDG 681.459659
SEK 10.964112
SGD 1.481613
SHP 0.891782
SLE 25.81704
SLL 23796.374013
SOS 648.542066
SRD 41.814301
STD 23488.270048
SVC 9.926733
SYP 14754.126111
SZL 21.0621
THB 37.895855
TJS 11.957742
TMT 3.983182
TND 3.374952
TOP 2.657841
TRY 43.675756
TTD 7.684588
TWD 36.35647
TZS 3052.637913
UAH 47.063537
UGX 4155.901413
USD 1.13481
UYU 47.736584
UZS 14690.11156
VES 98.215637
VND 29510.726789
VUV 136.641768
WST 3.141606
XAF 654.984298
XAG 0.034741
XAU 0.000343
XCD 3.06688
XDR 0.813352
XOF 652.515286
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.085629
ZAR 21.093111
ZMK 10214.64531
ZMW 31.568119
ZWL 365.408267
  • BCC

    -1.2200

    93.28

    -1.31%

  • CMSC

    -0.2300

    22.01

    -1.04%

  • CMSD

    -0.0500

    22.3

    -0.22%

  • AZN

    0.0800

    71.79

    +0.11%

  • SCS

    -0.0900

    9.92

    -0.91%

  • NGG

    -0.0400

    73

    -0.05%

  • RBGPF

    -0.4500

    63

    -0.71%

  • RIO

    -1.4800

    59.4

    -2.49%

  • BCE

    0.3300

    22.25

    +1.48%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    12.91

    -0.15%

  • GSK

    0.8800

    39.85

    +2.21%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2500

    10

    -2.5%

  • RELX

    0.8400

    54.63

    +1.54%

  • BTI

    0.6900

    43.55

    +1.58%

  • VOD

    0.1800

    9.76

    +1.84%

  • BP

    -0.6100

    27.46

    -2.22%

Despite war's end, Afghanistan remains deep in crisis: UN relief chief
Despite war's end, Afghanistan remains deep in crisis: UN relief chief / Photo: Wakil Kohsar - AFP

Despite war's end, Afghanistan remains deep in crisis: UN relief chief

Climate change, women's rights, displacement, poverty: Afghanistan remains a priority as it faces overlapping crises, the UN's relief chief Tom Fletcher told AFP on Wednesday, deploring "brutal" aid budget cuts.

Text size:

"We've identified 17 crises across the world where our engagement is most urgent, most vital. Afghanistan is high on that list," said the United Nations Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs in an interview with AFP during a visit to northern Afghanistan's Kunduz province.

Fletcher's visit comes after US President Donald Trump's decision to slash foreign aid sent shock waves across the globe.

Washington had been the top donor to Afghanistan, having spent $3.71 billion in humanitarian and development aid since the Taliban returned to power in 2021 and imposed a severe interpretation of Islamic law.

"We're in a period when we're having to massively prioritise, take brutal choices... literally life and death choices, about where to operate and which lives to save," Fletcher said.

"You can look at Sudan for the scale of the crisis, you can look at Gaza for the intensity, the ferocity of the killing there," he added. "Afghanistan is a different kind of challenge but it's a huge challenge nonetheless."

Climate change is hitting the Central Asian country "particularly hard" and it "will drive the needs even more than conflict will in the period ahead", he said.

"You've got that combined with the existing levels of poverty and these decades of instability and conflict."

- 'Dialogue' on women's rights -

The situation of women's rights in the country adds to the layers of a "building up of crisis upon crisis", Fletcher added.

The Taliban authorities have imposed restrictions on women that the UN has denounced as "gender apartheid".

Women and girls have been banned from education beyond primary school as well as many sectors of work and public spaces.

"I think this particular dynamic around women and girls is something that can surely cut through to even the most hard-hearted and cynical transactional politician right now," Fletcher said.

After meetings with Taliban officials this week in the capital Kabul and the Taliban heartland of southern Kandahar, Fletcher noted the need for "dialogue in order to try and change the mindset" on women's rights.

"It's encouraging to me that people were willing to have the conversation and not have it in a purely defensive way," he said.

Afghan women are particularly affected by humanitarian aid cuts, especially in the health care sector, which has been heavily dependent on foreign support.

In Afghanistan, maternal mortality rates of 620 per 100,000 births and infant mortality rates of 55 children under five per 1,000 births are among the highest in the world, according to UNICEF.

"I challenge anyone who celebrates aid cuts to sit with a woman who has lost her child because she had to cycle for three hours while in labour to get the care that she needed," said Fletcher, after having met Afghan women at a mobile health centre.

- 'Humanitarian reset' -

When Amina, a 28-year-old housewife, fell ill, she walked for an hour and a half to reach the centre in the rural countryside.

"There are no clinics, no doctors who come here, nothing nearby. We don't even have electricity," she told AFP.

The small facility, supported by the local non-governmental organisation JACK and UN agencies, is under strain.

Already overwhelmed, it now has to accommodate patients from US-funded clinics that had to close, as well as Afghans who have been expelled from neighbouring Pakistan since early April.

"The reality with the cuts was that we didn't see the impact straight away," Fletcher said.

"It's now that we're really coming to understand how brutal these cuts are going to be."

Under these conditions, he said, "we're in the process now of a massive humanitarian reset".

"We've got to rediscover that sense of coexistence and care for the most vulnerable people on the planet. I don't think that's gone away just because of a few election results," he said.

"I don't think you can put tariffs on humanitarian action," he added, referring to the trade war recently launched by Trump.

F.Vit--TPP