World Food Programme appeals for $19m aid for quake-hit Afghanistan

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World Food Programme Appeals For $19M Aid For Quake-Hit Afghanistan
The 37-year-old, who resigned in 2021 amid a separate corruption probe and has since left politics, could face three years in jail if convicted. Photo: PA Images
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Rahim Faiez, Associated Press

The United Nations’ World Food Programme has appealed for $19 million to provide emergency assistance to tens of thousands of people affected by a series of devastating earthquakes and aftershocks that has rocked western Afghanistan.

Ana Maria Salhuana, deputy country director of the World Food Programme (WFP) in Afghanistan, said it is helping survivors but urgently needed more funding because “we are having to take this food from an already severely underfunded programme”.

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The group said it is working to provide emergency food assistance to 100,000 people in the region.

“Disasters like these earthquakes pound communities who are already barely able to feed themselves back into utter destitution,” the WFP said.

Afghanistan Earthquake
Injured people receive treatment after a powerful earthquake in Herat province, western Afghanistan (MSF Afghanistan/AP)

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A 6.3 magnitude earthquake struck part of western Afghanistan on Sunday, after thousands of people died and entire villages were flattened by major quakes a week earlier.

It was the fourth quake the US Geological Survey has measured at 6.3 magnitude in the same area in just over a week.

The initial earthquakes on October 7th flattened whole villages in Herat province and were among the most destructive in the country’s recent history.

The WFP said staff responded within hours of the first earthquakes, distributing fortified biscuits, pulses and other food items to affected families in destroyed villages.

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“An estimated 25,000 buildings have been destroyed,” the group said a statement. “The survivors are currently sleeping in tents next to the rubble of their homes, desperate and afraid of further earthquakes and aftershocks.”

The latest quake was centred about 19 miles (30km) outside the city of Herat, the capital of Herat province, and was four miles (6km) below the surface, the US Geological Survey said.

More than 90 per cent of the people killed were women and children, UN officials said. The quakes struck during the daytime, when many of the men in the region were working outdoors.

Taliban officials said the earlier quakes killed more than 2,000 people across the province. The epicentre was in Zenda Jan district, where the majority of casualties and damage occurred.

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Afghanistan Earthquake
An Afghan woman and her children walk amid debris in Herat province (Save the Children/AP)

The WFP said affected families will need help for months with winter just weeks away.

It said that if there is funding, the emergency response will be complemented by longer-term resilience programmes so vulnerable communities are able to rebuild their livelihoods.

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Earlier this year, the UN organisation was forced to reduce the amount of food families receive and to cut 10 million people in Afghanistan from life-saving food assistance due to a massive funding shortfall.

In addition to the earthquake response, the WFP also urgently needs $400 million to prepare food before winter, when communities are cut off due to snow and landslides. In Afghanistan, these include communities of women who are being increasingly pushed out of public life.

The initial quake, numerous aftershocks and a third 6.3-magnitude quake on Wednesday flattened villages, destroying hundreds of mud-brick homes that could not withstand such force. Schools, health clinics and other village facilities also collapsed.

Besides rubble and funerals after that devastation, there was little left of the villages in the region’s dusty hills.

Survivors are struggling to come to terms with the loss of multiple family members and, in many places, living residents are outnumbered by volunteers who came to search the debris and dig mass graves.

Earthquakes are common in Afghanistan, where there are a number of fault lines and frequent movement among three nearby tectonic plates.

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