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    Over 13.8 Million Afghans Face Acute Food Insecurity as Humanitarian Lifelines Snap

    CountriesAfghanistanOver 13.8 Million Afghans Face Acute Food Insecurity as...
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    Over 13.8 Million Afghans Face Acute Food Insecurity as Humanitarian Lifelines Snap

    As economic collapse, climate shocks, and regional tensions disrupt supply chains, the UN warns that over 13.8 million Afghans – including millions of children – face a life-threatening food and malnutrition emergency.

    Afghanistan is plunging deeper into a catastrophic humanitarian crisis – more than 13.8 million people across the country are currently facing acute food insecurity as a deadly combination of economic collapse, soaring unemployment, climate-related shocks, and escalating regional tensions takes its toll. According to a stark new warning issued by the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) in May 2026, the situation has become a “silent emergency,” jeopardizing the future of millions of vulnerable families, particularly women and children.

    The WFP reports that nearly five million children, alongside pregnant and breastfeeding women, are now suffering from severe malnutrition. Aid agencies, which have long served as the ultimate safety net for the Afghan population, are buckling under the immense pressure of severe funding shortages and severely disrupted supply chains. The specialised nutritional foods required to treat the most critical cases of malnutrition are being rapidly depleted, leaving humanitarian workers with vanishing options and forcing Afghan families into impossible daily calculations for their survival.

    The Human Face of the Crisis

    For millions of Afghans, hunger is an inescapable, daily reality. In the northeastern city of Faizabad in Badakhshan province for instance, the silent emergency of malnutrition is clearly visible in the faces of children and mothers struggling to survive.

    Raqiba Ahmadi, a mother of six, represents the agonizing plight of countless women across the country. Crisis follows crisis, and with her husband currently unemployed, survival has become a heavy burden carried almost entirely on her shoulders. “The little food we can afford we give to our children, but that is not enough,” Ahmadi said in a statement shared by the United Nations. Her youngest daughter is only just beginning to recover from a severe bout of malnutrition, a recovery made possible only through previously available aid.

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    Ahmadi’s situation is a tragic microcosm of a nationwide epidemic. Mothers are routinely forced to make heartbreaking decisions: deciding who in the family eats first, who must wait, and how far they can stretch their meagre daily rations. For these households, international nutrition programs are not just helpful supplements – they are the final barrier preventing starvation.

    “Essential, Not Optional”: The WFP’s Desperate Warning

    Humanitarian operations in Afghanistan are currently stretched to their absolute breaking point. Overlapping crises have drained the WFP’s resources, directly threatening the vital programs that have kept communities afloat.

    John Aylieff, the WFP Country Director for Afghanistan, has painted a grim picture of the current state of emergency. “Programmes such as nutrition assistance are essential, not optional,” Aylieff stated. “They are a lifeline for millions of women and children across Afghanistan. But unfortunately, this lifeline has already been severed, threatening the lives of hundreds of thousands of mothers and children.”

    Earlier in 2026, the WFP revealed the horrifying extent of the financial shortfall. Due to a drastic reduction in international assistance, the agency noted it could only adequately assist 2 million people per month out of the more than 17.4 million who urgently required food assistance. At current funding levels, WFP’s nutrition services can only reach one in four acutely malnourished children, and one in three pregnant or breastfeeding women. The vast majority of the population is being left unprotected against disease, deterioration, and death. “Without reliable cross-border access and sustained funding, we risk pushing thousands more mothers and children into life-threatening malnutrition,” Aylieff warned.

    The Vicious Cycle of Economic Collapse

    Afghanistan has faced mounting, relentless economic hardship since the Taliban returned to power in August 2021. The political shift triggered a sharp, immediate decline in international development funding, which previously subsidized much of the country’s public sector and infrastructure. Compounding the loss of foreign aid is the freezing of national assets and widespread, chronic unemployment that has devastated the middle and lower classes alike.

    Women and children have been disproportionately affected by the economic downturn. Humanitarian groups have repeatedly pointed out that the Taliban’s sweeping restrictions on women’s employment, education, and participation in public life have systematically eliminated vital sources of household income. Without the ability to work, countless female-led households, or families relying on dual incomes, have been pushed into extreme poverty, stripping them of the purchasing power necessary to secure basic food supplies in a volatile market.

    Regional Tensions and Severed Supply Chains

    As if domestic economic hurdles were not enough, Afghanistan’s fragile food supply has been battered by a series of geopolitical and regional shocks. The ongoing fallout from crises in the Middle East, coupled with escalating cross-border hostilities with neighbouring Pakistan, has critically disrupted trade routes.

    Earlier this year, cross-border violence and air strikes affected 52 districts across 11 provinces, displacing an estimated 20,000 families and compounding vulnerabilities in areas already classified at emergency levels of hunger. These border closures have brought trade to a grinding halt. The Afghanistan Chamber of Commerce and Investment (ACCI) reported recently that thousands of Afghanistan’s cargo containers are currently stranded in transit hubs like Dubai, unable to reach the country.

    This logistical nightmare has sparked a dramatic surge in the cost of essential goods. While everyday consumers are priced out of the market for staple foods, local producers are equally devastated. Afghan watermelon farmers, for example, have been hit hard by the sudden border closures, watching local prices plummet as their export produce rots, severing their only source of seasonal income.

    Climate Shocks Compounding the Misery

    The economic and political crises are unfolding against the backdrop of extreme environmental volatility. Afghanistan is highly vulnerable to climate change, with recurring droughts severely crippling domestic agricultural output over the past several years. When rain does fall, it frequently arrives in the form of devastating flash floods that wash away arable topsoil, destroy vital infrastructure, and ruin the limited crops that farmers manage to grow.

    These climate-related shocks mean that rural areas, where access to health services and stable employment is already limited, are disproportionately reliant on the very safety nets that are currently failing. When local harvests fail and international aid vanishes, rural communities are left entirely defenceless.

    A Critical Crossroads for the International Community

    The United Nations and its partner humanitarian agencies have repeatedly appealed for increased international support for Afghanistan, urging global donors not to turn a blind eye to the worsening catastrophe. Last year, the WFP successfully supported more than 12.4 million Afghans with food rations and nutrition assistance, nearly three-quarters of whom were women and children. Today, that reach has been drastically slashed, with remaining aid operations heavily at risk of further cuts.

    For the families navigating this crisis, the politics surrounding international aid and recognition offer little comfort. The reality on the ground is dictated by soaring market prices, empty cupboards, and children fading from preventable malnutrition. Aid agencies emphasize that treating malnutrition and supplying food are immediate, non-negotiable necessities. As the WFP and other organizations exhaust their remaining stocks, the window to prevent widespread famine in Afghanistan is closing rapidly. Without an immediate, large-scale injection of funding and a resolution to border blockades, millions of Afghans face an increasingly dark and uncertain future.

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