Afghan hunger crisis deepens as aid funding falls short, UN says

KABUL, Dec 16 (Reuters) – The U.N. World Food Programme is ​unable for the first time ​in decades to provide effective aid to millions of Afghans ⁠suffering from malnutrition, with deaths especially among children likely to rise this winter, the WFP said on Tuesday.

International aid to ​war-torn Afghanistan has dwindled significantly since 2021, ‍when U.S.-led forces exited the ​country and the Taliban regained power. The crisis has been compounded by multiple natural calamities such as earthquakes.

“For the first time in decades, WFP cannot launch a significant ⁠winter response, while also scaling up emergency and nutrition support nationwide,” the U.N. agency said in a statement, adding that it needed over $460 million to deliver food assistance to six million most vulnerable Afghans.

“With child malnutrition already at its highest level in decades, and unprecedented reductions in (international) funding for ​agencies providing essential services, ⁠access to treatment is increasingly scarce,” ⁠it said.

Child deaths are likely to rise during Afghanistan’s freezing winter months when food is scarcest, it said.

The WFP estimates that 17 million people face hunger, up about 3 million ‌from last year, a rise driven in part ​by millions of Afghans deported from neighbouring Iran and Pakistan under programmes to send back migrants and refugees.

Humanitarian agencies have warned that Afghanistan lacks the infrastructure to ‍absorb a sudden influx of returnees.

“We are only 12% funded. This is an obstacle,” Jean-Martin Bauer, WFP Director of ‌Food Security and Nutrition Analysis, told a press briefing ‌in Geneva. He added that 3.7 million Afghan children were acutely malnourished, 1 million of whom were severe cases. “So yes, children are dying,” he said.

(Reporting by Mohammad Yunus Yawar in Kabul ⁠and Emma Farge in Geneva; writing by Gibran Peshimam; editing by Mark Heinrich)

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