Afghanistan: UN Seeks Millions in International Aid
The United
Nations is seeking to raise more than $600m (£434m) in aid for Afghanistan,
warning the country is facing a major humanitarian crisis.
It is calling
for international support at a conference in Geneva, following the Taliban's
takeover last month.
"After
decades of war, suffering and insecurity, they [Afghans] face perhaps their
most perilous hour," Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said.
The UN says
the $600m target will bring "vital relief" to millions.
In his
opening remarks, Mr Guterres called the humanitarian crisis in Afghanistan a
"looming catastrophe", and said the people of Afghanistan were in
desperate need of a lifeline.
"Today
one in three Afghans do not know where their next meal will come from, the
poverty rate is spiralling and basic public services are close to collapse.
Hundreds of thousands of people have been forced to flee their homes and at the
same time Afghanistan faces a severe drought - the second to hit the country in
four years. Many people could run out of food by the end of this month just as
winter approaches," he warned.
The UN has
appealed to the Taliban to give aid workers unimpeded access.
Even before
the Islamist militants retook control of Afghanistan in August, more than
550,000 people had been forced to flee their homes this year due to fighting.
That means
an estimated 3.5 million people are currently internally displaced within the
country. Afghans have also had to deal with a severe drought as well as food
shortages.
The
conference on Monday is being attended by top UN officials as well as aid
organisations including the Red Cross and various international governments.
About a
third of the money it is seeking to raise would be used by the UN's World Food
Programme (WFP), which earlier said many Afghans did not have access to cash to
afford sufficient food.
"It's
now a race against time and the snow to deliver life-saving assistance,"
WFP deputy regional director Anthea Webb told Reuters news agency. "We are
quite literally begging and borrowing to avoid food stocks running out."
The UN High
Commissioner for Refugees, Filippo Grandi, tweeted that he had arrived in Kabul
on Monday to "assess the country's acute humanitarian needs".
Thousands of
people have fled Afghanistan since the Taliban took control of Kabul on 15
August following a rapid offensive.
On Monday, a
special Pakistan International Airlines flight arrived in the capital to take
passengers to Islamabad.
In a
separate development, Abdul Ghani Baradar, the Taliban co-founder and new
deputy prime minister of Afghanistan, issued an apparent audio statement after
reports that he had died spread on social media.
"I have
been away on trips," he said in the clip. "Wherever I am at the
moment, we are all fine, all my brothers and friends."
The BBC has
not been able to verify the recording, which was posted on a number of official
Taliban websites.
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