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Food insecurity forces hundreds of Afghans to leave homes

Wed, Apr 30, 2008

Current Affairs

KABUL: Hundreds of people have abandoned their homes and moved to urban areas in different parts of Afghanistan, and some have reportedly migrated to neighbouring Pakistan, due to worsening food insecurity, largely resulting from soaring food prices and low cereal supplies, provincial officials said.

At least 1,000 food-insecure people have left their homes in several parts of the northeastern province of Badakhshan over the past month, Nasir Hemat, the provincial head of the Afghan Red Crescent Society (ARCS) said. “People have moved to other provinces and some have gone to neighbouring countries,” said Hemat, adding that in various parts of the province some people were eating grass due to lack of food.

Hundreds of locals have also been displaced in Alburz and other districts in the northern province of Balkh, local Kabul-based media said, quoting several residents and one provincial official. Aid agencies have warned that vulnerable Afghan households may not be able to cope with worsening food-insecurity, and “additional shocks” will probably lead to mass displacement and starvation.

In an effort to control soaring food prices and mitigate their impact on destitute Afghans the government has earmarked US$50 million to buy and import food items from regional markets, a spokesman for President Hamid Karzai said in Kabul on 22 April. Afghan food markets are affected by a strict ban imposed by the Pakistani government on wheat flour exports. Pakistani officials say their country is also affected by increasing global food prices.

Given Afghanistan’s weak coping and response capacity, millions of its food-insecure and highly vulnerable citizens are increasingly becoming a heavy burden for the UN World Food Programme (WFP), which already feeds over five million Afghans. To alleviate the food-insecurity crisis aid agencies and the Afghan government should work on “well-targeted food assistance”, improve peoples’ purchasing power, exempt commercial food imports from tax, boost regional cooperation to mitigate the impact of high food prices, and tackle widespread food-insecurity, the authors of the FEWS report recommended.-SANA

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This post was written by:

Rubab Saleem - who has written 2986 posts on Pakistan Times!.

Rubab Saleem is Editor of Pakistan Times

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