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Afghanistan on brink of `humanitarian catastrophe`, worst is yet to come: United Nations agencies
More than 250,000 people have been forced from their homes since May, 80% of them women and children, the U.N. refugee agency`s Shabia Mantoo said
Highlights
- Western embassies prepared to send in troops to help evacuate staff, although the United Nations said its 320 staff members would remain
- Thousands of people are rushing from rural areas to the capital Kabul and other urban centres in search of shelter," a UN official said.
- A WHO official reported a doubling of trauma cases in the last two to three months in the health facilities
Geneva: U.N. agencies on Friday (August 13) warned of a humanitarian catastrophe in Afghanistan as Taliban advances drive tens of thousands of people from their homes amid spreading hunger. Insurgents have taken control of the second- and third-biggest cities as Western embassies prepared to send in troops to help evacuate staff, although the United Nations said its 320 staff members would remain. "We fear the worst is yet to come and the larger tide of hunger is fast approaching... The situation has all the hallmarks of a humanitarian catastrophe," the World Food Programme`s Thomson Phiri told a U.N. briefing.
More than 250,000 people have been forced from their homes since May, 80% of them women and children, the U.N. refugee agency`s Shabia Mantoo said. Many reported extortion by armed groups on the way and having to dodge improvised explosive devices along major roads. Thousands of people are rushing from rural areas to the capital Kabul and other urban centres in search of shelter, another U.N. official said.
"They are sleeping in the open, in parks and public spaces," Jens Laerke, spokesman of the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. "A major concern right now is simply finding shelter for them."
A World Health Organization official reported a doubling of trauma cases in the last two to three months in the health facilities it supports. She also expressed concerns about shortages of medical supplies and said it was training medical staff on mass casualty management.