QADIS, Afghanistan — When the
temperatures plunged far below freezing in Niaz Mohammad’s village last month,
the father of three struggled to keep his family warm. One particularly cold
night, he piled every stick and every shrub he had collected into their small wood
stove. He scavenged for trash that might burn, covered the windows with plastic
tarps, and held his two-month-old son close to his chest.
اضافة اعلان
But the cold was merciless. Freezing winds
whistled through cracks in the wall. Ice crept across the room: It covered the
windows, then the walls, then the thick red blanket wrapped around Mohammad’s
wailing son.
Soon the infant fell silent in his arms.
His tears turned to ice that clung to his face. By daybreak, he was gone.
Today, around half of the country’s 40 million people face potentially life-threatening levels of food insecurity, according to the United Nations. Of those, 6 million are nearing famine.
“The cold took him,” Mohammad, 30, told
visiting journalists for the New York Times, describing the details of that
horrible night.
Afghanistan is gripped by a winter that
Afghan officials and aid group officials are describing as the harshest in over
a decade, battering millions of people already reeling from a humanitarian
crisis. As of Monday, more than 200 people had died from hypothermia and more
than 225,000 head of livestock had perished from the cold alone, according to
Afghan authorities. That does not take into account a vast and rising human
toll from malnutrition, disease, and untreated injuries as clinics and
hospitals around the country have come under stress.
The aid crisisWhile Afghanistan has endured natural
disasters and economic desperation for decades, the harsh temperatures this
winter come at a particularly difficult moment. In late December, the Taliban
administration barred women from working in most local and international aid
organizations — prompting many to suspend operations, severing a lifeline for
communities reliant on the aid.
Niaz
Mohammad, whose two-month-old son died in freezing temperatures for lack of
enough fuel for the family’s wood stove, with one of his daughters at a house
where they are now staying in the Qadis district of Afghanistan.
Despite weeks of negotiations between
humanitarian officials and the government, the Taliban’s top leadership appears
unwilling to reverse the ban. That has left the aid community divided over what
a principled response looks like: shutting off aid to millions in need, or
trying to continue without women in their ranks, thus greatly reducing their
agencies’ reach in Afghanistan.
The Afghan Ministry of Disaster Management
has tried to fill the gap, officials say, working with local organizations to
provide some food and cash assistance. But the response has been hampered by
difficulty reaching far-flung communities (some accessible only by military
helicopter), and by financial sanctions from foreign governments.
In recent weeks, some nongovernmental
organizations have negotiated with local officials to secure exemptions to the
ban, letting them continue to operate with female aid workers in certain
provinces. But many donors have balked at the authorities’ discrimination
against women, who have effectively been shut out of most aspects of public
life, education, and employment. Some, particularly among European countries,
even privately weighed cutting most funding for Afghanistan in response,
according to diplomats and international humanitarian workers.
“This winter was the worst winter, the worst I have ever experienced.”
The temporary cutback in aid has already
been felt across Afghanistan, which fell into a humanitarian crisis after
Western troops withdrew in August 2021. Soon after, sanctions crippled the
banking sector, food prices soared, and hospitals filled with malnourished
children. Today, around half of the country’s 40 million people face
potentially life-threatening levels of food insecurity, according to the United
Nations. Of those, 6 million are nearing famine.
Famine, drought, and coldIn Mohammad’s village, in the Qadis
district of northwestern Afghanistan, the low temperatures devastated people
already living on the edge of survival. The district center in Qadis is home to
just 4,000 or so families, living in low, mud-brick homes webbed by dirt
alleys. The town sits between desert dunes and snow-topped mountains.
In recent years, the province — one of the
nation’s poorest — has suffered from a crippling drought that wilted fields and
famished farm animals. An earthquake last year razed entire villages. After the
Western-backed government collapsed along with the economy, many men in Qadis
left for Herat, an economic hub around 160km away, or for Iran, looking for
work. Few found it.
When the first wave of cold tore through
last month, it pushed the town to the brink. Five hundred patients a day went
down with pneumonia or other cold-related ailments or injuries, flooding the
town’s health clinic in record numbers, according to Dr Zamanulden Haziq, the clinic’s
director.
A
child brought by his father to the Qadis district of Afghanistan, looking for
shelter and assistance, on February 7, 2023.
One resident, Taza Gul, 50, stepped outside
at dawn to find her husband stretched out in the snow. He had fallen on his way
to their outhouse at night, hours earlier. As she brushed the snow off him, she
saw one arm and one leg had turned blackish-blue; he died soon after.
In a village nearby, Gul Qadisi, 62, spent
nearly a month desperately trying to secure medical care for her one-year-old
grandson, who developed a relentless cough that left him gasping for air. The
roads were too clogged with snow for any cars to take them to a clinic or
hospital. Finally, she managed to get him to the regional hospital in Herat,
where the children’s intensive care unit, run by Doctors Without Borders, was
crowded to double its capacity, with two or three sick children for every bed.
Doctors told her she had barely made it in time. The child had been near death
from pneumonia.
“This winter was the worst winter, the
worst I have ever experienced,” she told New York Times journalists this month,
her grandson recovering in a hospital bed at her side.
A community weathering winterIn this community, as with many across Afghanistan,
the overlapping crises of an economic crash, malnutrition, and brutal weather
have cut short any sense of relief after the long war finally ended in 2021.
“We were happy the fighting is over, but
the problem is now we don’t have money to buy food or wood to keep us warm,”
said Chaman Gul, a mother of three daughters in her 30s. Her son was killed
seven years ago by soldiers with the Western-backed government, who claimed he
had provided support to the Taliban, she said. He was 12 years old. Two years
later, her husband, the family’s breadwinner, was disabled by a stray bullet.
Gul and her family live in a one-room home
that sits against a hillside a 10-minute walk from the town’s main street. They
burn manure, kept piled outside the house, in a makeshift stove for warmth. The
house is decorated with scraps the children found during trips into town
looking for things to burn: a flyer for a cellphone company, drawings from a
handbook for mothers that show children collecting water from a river and a
well.
“We were happy the fighting is over, but the problem is now we don’t have money to buy food or wood to keep us warm.”
When the cold weather set in, village
elders tried to organize food for Gul’s family and others in need. But most of
the parents in the town had so little bread and rice that they were already
skipping meals so their children could eat. There was nothing left to share.
One recent afternoon, the town was
preparing for another cold snap. Men scavenged the nearby hills for as much
kindling as they could carry. Elders frantically phoned shepherds who had left
with their herds and told them to return — the mountains where they hoped to
find usable pastures would soon be blanketed in fresh snow.
A road wet from melted snow in the Qadis
district of Afghanistan.
Bahaulden Rahimi, a 60-year-old shepherd,
was three days into a six-day journey to find land where his sheep could graze
when he got the warning call. Haunted by the account of a shepherd who had died
with his herd when temperatures dropped in January, he came straight home.
Now, he worries that he has merely delayed
his flock’s fate. He was running out of feed, the price of which had more than
doubled at the local market in recent months, he said. He had picked up a
hacking cough that was worsening by the day, and 13 of his 80 sheep had already
died from the cold, a roughly $3,000 loss that threatened his family’s lives,
as well.
“Losing the sheep, it’s like losing a
family member,” he said. “This is all we have.”
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