Nearly half of rural Afghans face food insecurity, UN reports

Over 13 million Afghanis are food insecure due to drought, severe flooding and security threats

An Afghan elderly man, left, receives free food donated by Muslim Hands, a not-for-profit organization, during the last days of the holy month of Ramadan in Kabul, Afghanistan, Monday, June 3, 2019. Muslims throughout the world are celebrating Ramadan, the holiest month in the Islamic calendar, refraining from eating, drinking, smoking and sex from sunrise to sunset. (AP Photo/Rahmat Gul)
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Nearly half of all rural Afghans now face some level of food insecurity, a UN agency has said, as a historic drought and deteriorating security situation takes hold of the country.

Described by some locals as the worst in a lifetime, Afghanistan's drought had a devastating effect on rural populations last year, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (Ocha) said in an overview of Afghanistan aid operations in 2018.

"With crops failing and limited water supplies, as well as increased malnutrition and illness, hundreds of thousands of people left their homes to seek help near major cities," Ocha said.

The misery was compounded this spring when rains finally did come, as deadly flooding swept through provinces across the country.

The number of people in need of food assistance in Afghanistan rose from 3.3 million at the start of last year to a projected current level of 13.5 million – or 47 per cent of the population – as of February 2019, Ocha reported.

That group has been affected to varying degrees, according to the Ocha, but none were at immediate risk of famine – though a failed harvest in 2019 could change that.

Ocha said aid humanitarian groups were able to reach about 6.5 million people last year on a budget of $471 million (Dh1.73b).

Last month, the UN children's agency said that acute malnutrition was affecting an estimated two million children under the age of five in the country, with hundreds of thousands at risk of death.

The most recent surveys show that 22 out of 34 provinces are above the emergency threshold of acute malnutrition.

"Without an improvement in the overall food and nutrition security situation, which requires urgent funding, the nutritional status of children in Afghanistan is likely to further deteriorate," Christophe Boulierac, Unicef spokesperson in Geneva, said in a statement.

Despite the impact of the drought, conflict remained the largest driver of humanitarian need in Afghanistan last year, Ocha said.

According to the UN, 3,804 civilians – including more than 900 children – were killed in Afghanistan in 2018, with another 7,189 wounded. It was the deadliest year on record.

"An increase in mass casualty incidents, escalating hostilities and the dangers posed by unexploded ordnance all contributed to record-high numbers of trauma cases in 2018," the Ocha report states.

Another compounding factor was a wave of Afghans returning from Iran as the economy there slowed down amid new US sanctions, cutting demand for Afghan workers.

While returns from Pakistan were at an all-time low, with only 46,300 recorded in 2018, 775,000 Afghans came back from Iran during 2018, according to Ocha.