Kabul (Afghanistan): Severe financial shortfalls and the coming of winter could spell a “major humanitarian crisis” for Afghanistan if money isn't restored to pay for wages and services, especially healthcare, the regional director of the International Federation of the Red Cross said on Thursday.
Alexander Matheou said Afghanistan is set to enter an “extremely difficult few months” as temperatures drop, compounding food shortages resulting from drought and poverty. Cuts to health services put many vulnerable Afghans, particularly in rural areas, at risk.
The warning comes as Taliban authorities swiftly dispersed with gunfire a women-led protest demanding equal rights to education in Kabul. Posters held by a small group of women saying “Do not burn our books!” were confiscated and scrapped by armed men, on the grounds that the women had not asked for permission to rally.
The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Society are appealing for 36 million CHF ($38 million) to continue funding health clinics, emergency relief, and other services across 16 provinces. Matheou spoke at a news conference in Kabul a day after U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric asked donors to fast-track funding for a $606 million flash appeal that is only 22% funded to help 11 million Afghans for the remainder of the year.
“There needs to be some solution to the financial flows into Afghanistan to ensure that at least salaries can be paid, and that essential supplies, power and water being two of them, can be procured,” Matheou said. The primary health system needs additional funding sources independent of the group in order to continue operating, he added.
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Since the Taliban seized control of Afghanistan in mid-August, the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund have paused disbursements to the government, while the U.S. froze billons of dollars in assets held in American accounts by the Afghan Central Bank.
Foreign aid previously accounted for nearly 75% of Afghanistan’s public expenditure, according to a World Bank report. But with the funds now frozen, an economic crisis looms.
Cuts to healthcare have resulted in 2,500 health facilities no longer working, and over 20,000 health staff, 7,000 of them women, no longer being paid, Matheou said.
During a five-day trip he met with Taliban leaders who expressed a desire for the continuation and even scaling up of humanitarian assistance and that sanctions be lifted. Since the Taliban overran Kabul on Aug. 15 the world has been watching to see whether they will re-create their harsh rule of the 1990s.