Categories: Afghanistan

UN calls on Taliban to let women help give aid to desperate Afghans

UNITED NATIONS (AFP): The UN humanitarian chief said Monday he has pleaded with the Taliban to let women participate in a massive effort to support desperate Afghans struggling to survive a “savage” winter.

Afghanistan is facing one of the world s worst humanitarian crises, with more than half of its 38 million population facing hunger and nearly four million children suffering from malnutrition.

At least 166 people died in a recent wave of bitterly cold weather that heaped misery on the poverty-stricken nation.

The crisis was compounded last year when Taliban leadership banned Afghan women from working with NGOs, forcing several aid agencies to suspend their vital work.

In recent weeks, the authorities have allowed women to work in the health sector only.

But “Afghanistan is going through a savage winter,” UN Under-Secretary General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Martin Griffiths told reporters.

“Last winter, we managed to survive. I don t know if we can do this indefinitely, not with these bans.”

The United Nations has pleaded with the Islamists to expand the exemptions to “cover all the aspects of humanitarian action,” Griffiths, who led a delegation of senior NGO officials to meet several Taliban leaders in Kabul last week, said.

He said they were told “such arrangements would be forthcoming.”

But when, or what those arrangements might look like was another matter.

“We were told the guidelines are being developed by the Taliban authorities,” allegedly providing a role for women in humanitarian operations, Griffiths said.

“Let s see if these guidelines do come through,” he said.

“Hopefully we won t wait too long. Because every day that goes by without proper functioning humanitarian aid is not a good day for the people of Afghanistan.”

Afghanistan has been frozen by temperatures as low as -33 degrees Celsius (-27 degrees Fahrenheit) since January 10, combined with widespread snowfall, icy gales and regular electricity outages.

Nearly 80,000 livestock, a vital commodity for Afghanistan s poor, also died in the recent cold snap.

Since returning to power in August 2021, the Taliban government has rapidly squeezed women out of public life, banning them also from secondary education, public sector work, as well as parks and baths.

Foreign aid has also declined dramatically since then and key central bank assets were seized by the United States, compounding the humanitarian crisis.

The Frontier Post

Recent Posts

Israel’s Gantz demands Gaza day-after plan by June 8, threatens to quit cabinet

JERUSALEM (Reuters): Israeli war cabinet minister Benny Gantz demanded on Saturday that Prime Minister Benjamin…

13 hours ago

Vietnam nominates public security minister to be new president

HANOI: Vietnam’s governing Communist Party has nominated the public security minister to be the next…

13 hours ago

In Canada, bodies go unclaimed as costs put funerals out of reach

TORONTO (Reuters): Some Canadian provinces have logged a jump in unclaimed dead bodies in recent…

13 hours ago

Nancy Pelosi’s husband’s attacker jailed for 30 years

SAN FRANCISCO (AFP): A man who attacked the elderly husband of former US House Speaker…

13 hours ago

Dar, Muqam to depart for Kyrgyzstan amid mob attacks

F.P. Report ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Saturday decided to send Deputy Prime Minister…

13 hours ago

Nawaz questions his disqualification

F.P. Report LAHORE: Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz supremo Mian Nawaz Sharif reiterated his long held position…

13 hours ago

This website uses cookies.