Afghans facing 'hell on earth' as winter looms
This is a country which is starting to feel the very real
fear of hunger.
The weather is turning from early autumn warmth to a sharp
chill. Several areas are reporting drought, which adds to the sense of growing
catastrophe.
At Maidan Wardak, 50 miles west of Kabul, a crowd of several
hundred men had gathered in the hope of getting flour from an official
distribution point. The flour was provided by the World Food Programme.
Taliban soldiers kept the crowd reasonably quiet, but people
who were told they weren't eligible for a hand-out were angry and frightened.
"The winter is nearly here," said one old man.
"I don't know how I'll get through it if I can't make bread".
The WFP is faced with having to raise its supplies to
Afghanistan to help more than 22 million people.
If the weather is as bad as experts are predicting this
winter, the expectation is that large numbers will be threatened with acute
hunger and widespread famine.
I spoke to the executive director of the WFP, David Beasley,
when he paid a visit to Kabul on Sunday.
His analysis of the situation was alarming.
"It is as bad as you possibly can imagine," said
Mr Beasley. "In fact, we're now looking at the worst humanitarian crisis
on Earth.
"Ninety-five percent of the people don't have enough
food, and now we're looking at 23 million people marching towards
starvation," he added. "The next six months are going to be
catastrophic. It is going to be hell on Earth."
Before the Taliban took power in Afghanistan in August,
there was confidence that the government of President Ashraf Ghani would be
able to cope with the threat of a bad winter, given the help of the
international community. That help evaporated when Mr Ghani's government
collapsed.
Western countries have cut off their aid to the country,
since they don't want to be seen to help a regime which bars girls from
education and is in favour of reintroducing the full range of sharia
punishments.
But will those countries just stand by now and allow
millions of innocent people to face acute hunger?
Mr Beasley challenges the governments and the billionaires
of the developed world to face up to the urgent need for help.
"To the world leaders, to the billionaires: imagine
that this was your little girl or your little boy, or your grandchild about to
starve to death," he said. "You would do everything you possibly
could, and when there's $400 trillion worth of wealth on the earth today, shame
on us."
"We let any child die from hunger. Shame on us. I don't
care where that child is," he adds.
In the city of Bamiyan in central Afghanistan, where in 2001
the Taliban destroyed the ancient and beautiful statues of the Buddha, carved
into the cliff side in the sixth century, we went to meet a widow, Fatema, and
her seven children aged from three to 16.
Her husband died of stomach cancer not long ago.
They are wretchedly poor, and live in a cave close to the
huge alcove in the cliff where one of the Buddhas used to stand.
Under the last government Fatema was able to get fairly
regular supplies of flour and oil, but those stopped directly the Taliban took
over.
Fatema used to make a little money weeding the soil for a
nearby farmer. Now, though, the drought which has been afflicting this area
means that fewer crops have survived, and there is no work for her.
"I'm frightened,' she says. "I've got nothing to
give the children. Soon I'll have to go out and beg."
Some parents have sold their daughters off to older men in
marriage. Fatema has refused to do that. But unless the supply of food resumes,
she and her children face actual starvation.
Now the snow is beginning to settle on the nearby
mountain-tops and there is a new sharpness in the air.
The winter will very soon be here, and huge numbers of
people like Fatema and her family will be on the very brink of catastrophe.
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