While the world’s focus has long since shifted, the humanitarian catastrophe in Afghanistan continues to be one of the worst and most severe anywhere.
According to the United Nations, a record 28.3 million people, or roughly two-thirds of the population, need humanitarian protection and aid, and six million of them are already dangerously near to famine. Girls and women are more at risk.
In the heart of Afghanistan’s mountains, in Bamyan, was the UN agency for refugees. The harsh weather, which impacted the poorest and most vulnerable people most hard, including some who had just moved back to the area after being uprooted by decades of conflict, was the coldest in more than a decade.
With nowhere else to go, some families are even sheltering in ancient caves. Others have taken out loans or borrowed from neighbors to withstand Afghanistan’s economic freefall, which has sent food prices skyrocketing.