In Afghanistan, A
Population in Crisis (24 September
2001)
GENEVA/NEW YORK, 24 September A humanitarian
crisis of stunning proportions is unfolding in Afghanistan. Twenty years
of brutal conflict, three years of severe drought, large-scale human
rights abuses, and significant population movements spurred most recently
by the present geo-political crisis have left more than 5 million civilians,
the vast majority of them women and children, with a fragile grip on
survival.
The onset of winter will loosen that grip even further.
With the eyes of the world on Afghanistan and the
neighbouring countries, we call attention to the following indicators
of a broad and disastrous humanitarian crisis:
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More than 5 million people currently require humanitarian
assistance to survive, including more than 1 million people who
have been displaced from their homes.
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Tens of thousands of people are now on the move
in search of safety and assistance, and the Office of the United
Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) believes that many
more are unable to move.
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Already, 3.8 million Afghans rely on United Nations
food aid to survive. By 1 November, the World Food Programme (WFP)
estimates that 5.5 million people will depend on its food shipments.
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Nearly 20 per cent of those in need are children
under the age of five, according to the United Nations Children's
Fund (UNICEF), many of whom are already struggling to survive.
United Nations agencies and other aid organizations
continue to operate camps for displaced people and food delivery with
the help of hundreds of devoted Afghan staff who remain at work inside
the country.
But lack of international humanitarian access is hastening the deterioration
of the situation. No additional food supplies can be delivered to Afghanistan
at the moment, and the WFP estimates that food reserves in the country
will be exhausted within two to three weeks.
We urge a world wounded by the horrific and deplorable
terrorist attacks of 11 September to be mindful of the principles of
international humanitarian law and to take all measures to protect the
civilian populations, especially the millions of children and women.
We call on the entire international community
especially the countries in the region - to help prevent further
tragedy by supporting
humanitarian relief efforts, by pressing for safe international
humanitarian access to all populations in need, by assuring the safety
and security of international and national relief personnel, by supporting
all measures
that lessen the chance of a humanitarian catastrophe in Afghanistan
and neighbouring countries, and by opening borders to those in need.
We particularly recognize the enormous burden already
carried by Pakistan and Iran in hosting 3.5 million Afghans and join
the UNHCR in urging more international support for asylum States to
ensure that their borders are open to all those who deserve protection
and humanitarian assistance.
We thank those donors governments, organizations
and individuals who continue to support humanitarian relief efforts
in this region, and urge the international community to increase its
support in the face of the growing humanitarian crisis.