July 27, 2022
1 min read

Afghanistan: 24.4 mn people in dire need of help

97 per cent of the Afghan population faces the prospect of living in poverty and falling below the poverty line…reports Asian Lite News

Some 24.4 million people in Afghanistan, including 13 million children, are in immediate need of humanitarian aid, a study by the UK-based Save the Children NGO revealed.

In the study released on Wednesday, 18.9 million people, including 9.2 million children in Afghanistan, are anticipated to experience an emergency or critical food insecurity between June and November 2022, reports Khaama Press.

Save the Children’s study cited the UN Development Program stating that 97 per cent of the Afghan population faces the prospect of living in poverty and falling below the poverty line.

Acute malnutrition affects 1.1 million Afghan children under the age of five, according to the report.

Covid-19, measles, acute watery diarrhoea (AWD), and dengue fever are among the numerous disease emergencies Afghanistan is currently dealing with.

A significant contraction of the economy, rising poverty, and financial instability, as well as high unemployment and high food and agricultural input prices, have been caused by the rapid drop in international grant support, loss of access to offshore assets, and disruption of financial links, says Save the Children.

With the Taliban running the country, Afghanistan’s unstable economy is impacted by the group’s political isolation and economic sanctions, which exacerbated the country’s already-impoverished citizens’ poverty, unemployment, and hunger.

ALSO READ: Tashkent meet on Afghanistan delayed by a day

Previous Story

Boris likely to be new NATO Chief

Next Story

Pak clerics in talks with TTP

Latest from -Top News

UK, Germany, Jordan call for ceasefire in Sudan

Foreign ministers warn of ‘apocalyptic’ crisis in Sudan as El-Fasher falls. UK announces further £5 million of humanitarian support in response to the violence   Foreign ministers of Germany, Jordan and the

Torkham opens partially

Pakistan eases its three-week border shutdown with Afghanistan to allow refugee returns, but trade remains halted as fragile ceasefire diplomacy struggles to contain wider tensions. Pakistan has partially reopened the Torkham border
Go toTop

Don't Miss

Taliban commander killed in Kabul hospital blast

The Taliban is yet to comment on the development, but

48-hour truce on fragile border

Pakistan and Afghanistan’s Taliban administration announce a 48-hour ceasefire after