UK aid to provide life-saving assistance to hundreds of thousands of Afghans at risk from severe drought

10 July 2018, Afghanistan, Badghis, Qala-e-Naw: Asal (name changed): “I arrived in Qala-e-Naw from Balamurghab [district, Badghis] in May. We were 400 families who left together. The others went onwards to Hirat City. We had no money to pay for transport, so we stayed here. I had already borrowed money from a shopkeeper. Transport costed us AFS3,000 ($41) and took five hours. I came here with my two children, two years and six months old. My husband is a drug addict, he abandoned us a long time ago. I do not know where he is. Some families got tents from NGOs. I did not, I do not know why. In the beginning, we had to buy water from the market, now we get water for free every day [via water trucking by an NGO]. We live on private land and the landowner wanted money for every tent, AFS500. None of us have paid anything, and he has not come back, but we do not know if he will. These two sheep are not mine, they are the only that all our families still have. All the others died or we sold them. But no one wanted to buy these two from us, they were too thin and sick. So we brought them with us. Maybe one day they will be fat again.” Photo: OCHA / Philippe Kropf

The UK will provide vital food, shelter and clean water to Afghans affected by one of the worst droughts the country has ever faced, Penny Mordaunt announces.

The UK will provide vital food, shelter and clean water to Afghans affected by one of the worst droughts the country has ever faced, International Development Secretary Penny Mordaunt announced today (Monday 26 November).

Afghanistan has faced a series of droughts in recent decades, which severely affect harvests and can destroy the livelihoods of farming families.

Speaking ahead of the Geneva Conference on Afghanistan (Tuesday 27 November), International Development Secretary Penny Mordaunt said:

This deadly drought is already affecting millions of Afghans, many of whom have had to leave their homes and livelihoods in desperate search of basic necessities.

UK aid will provide life-saving assistance to hundreds of thousands of Afghans, including food, clean water, and tents.

But others must step up alongside the UK, other donors must do more if we are to avoid a humanitarian catastrophe.

Today’s package, provided by the UK’s Department for International Development (DFID), will:

  • Provide tents and urgent relief items for up to 260,000 people who have fled their homes ahead of a bitter severe winter
  • Provide 602,660 people with food or cash transfers to buy essential items, with a monthly ration of special nutritious food to prevent malnutrition in young children for every household
  • Provide drought affected people with access to healthcare, clean water and sanitation so they can remain in their homes over winter.

The UK is the second largest humanitarian donor in Afghanistan. UK aid is helping to build a more stable, prosperous country for all Afghans.