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

EUR -
AED 4.234174
AFN 81.122166
ALL 97.629526
AMD 443.04022
ANG 2.063274
AOA 1057.218615
ARS 1362.027416
AUD 1.77131
AWG 2.07812
AZN 1.961543
BAM 1.948406
BBD 2.32697
BDT 140.945156
BGN 1.955914
BHD 0.434847
BIF 3431.578203
BMD 1.15291
BND 1.476298
BOB 7.99267
BRL 6.321639
BSD 1.152427
BTN 99.341031
BWP 15.407533
BYN 3.771588
BYR 22597.037105
BZD 2.314916
CAD 1.566857
CDF 3316.922004
CHF 0.939734
CLF 0.028177
CLP 1081.279866
CNY 8.277606
CNH 8.285394
COP 4730.770422
CRC 580.397567
CUC 1.15291
CUP 30.552116
CVE 109.849109
CZK 24.809464
DJF 205.221248
DKK 7.458325
DOP 68.141424
DZD 149.793015
EGP 57.852104
ERN 17.293651
ETB 154.761925
FJD 2.587941
FKP 0.84787
GBP 0.852836
GEL 3.14168
GGP 0.84787
GHS 11.869957
GIP 0.84787
GMD 82.433676
GNF 9985.109541
GTQ 8.851412
GYD 241.025382
HKD 9.05009
HNL 30.091811
HRK 7.537841
HTG 150.827655
HUF 403.634175
IDR 18793.240956
ILS 4.048651
IMP 0.84787
INR 99.531308
IQD 1509.770878
IRR 48549.042436
ISK 143.59515
JEP 0.84787
JMD 183.423962
JOD 0.817439
JPY 167.319566
KES 148.954916
KGS 100.822068
KHR 4615.485633
KMF 490.568169
KPW 1037.624973
KRW 1579.988257
KWD 0.353148
KYD 0.960455
KZT 597.931033
LAK 24863.649997
LBP 103260.756778
LKR 346.60474
LRD 230.49534
LSL 20.557789
LTL 3.404243
LVL 0.697384
LYD 6.253271
MAD 10.50145
MDL 19.684304
MGA 5175.361076
MKD 61.534736
MMK 2419.903836
MNT 4130.262797
MOP 9.318261
MRU 45.498348
MUR 52.353512
MVR 17.760548
MWK 1998.416616
MXN 21.874117
MYR 4.894682
MZN 73.728739
NAD 20.557789
NGN 1783.447923
NIO 42.40907
NOK 11.41536
NPR 158.945849
NZD 1.905518
OMR 0.443259
PAB 1.152427
PEN 4.152343
PGK 4.744994
PHP 65.591366
PKR 326.550739
PLN 4.275048
PYG 9206.065775
QAR 4.203648
RON 5.033028
RSD 117.22775
RUB 90.599741
RWF 1664.184923
SAR 4.325596
SBD 9.623791
SCR 16.34008
SDG 692.31904
SEK 10.951712
SGD 1.479385
SHP 0.906006
SLE 25.623434
SLL 24175.951652
SOS 658.60081
SRD 44.79002
STD 23862.910451
SVC 10.083735
SYP 14990.017548
SZL 20.553008
THB 37.576224
TJS 11.415183
TMT 4.035185
TND 3.406175
TOP 2.700231
TRY 45.446328
TTD 7.824309
TWD 34.130176
TZS 2990.858572
UAH 47.885504
UGX 4143.27752
USD 1.15291
UYU 47.350729
UZS 14653.394815
VES 117.789336
VND 30069.623635
VUV 138.250391
WST 3.172554
XAF 653.477252
XAG 0.031009
XAU 0.00034
XCD 3.115797
XDR 0.815408
XOF 653.482899
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.099376
ZAR 20.660552
ZMK 10377.572927
ZMW 28.056534
ZWL 371.236568
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

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