By Jutta Wolf

BERLIN | BRUSSELS (ACP-IDN) - Seventy-nine countries from Sub-Saharan Africa, the Caribbean and the Pacific (ACP) are determined to speak with one voice as they prepare to negotiate a major partnership framework with the 27-nation European Union (EU).

The new accord will follow on the current ACP-EU Partnership Agreement (also known as the Cotonou Agreement), which covers trade, development cooperation and political dialogue between the two parties until 2020.

Leading up to the launch of negotiations for the post-Cotonou period in 2018, there is a clear common interest in aligning future ACP-EU cooperation to the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

- Photo: 2021

Afghanistan Faces Funding Shortfall Amid Deepening Humanitarian Crisis

By Radwan Jakeen

NEW YORK (IDN) — Nearly 18 million Afghans or half the population of the South Asian country require assistance. A third of the country is malnourished, while half of all children under five are experiencing acute malnutrition.

In view of this critical situation, Ramiz Alakbarov, UN Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator for Afghanistan, has urged donors to step up support for the country.

Mr Alakbarov said a $1.3 billion appeal, launched earlier this year, is less than 40 per cent funded. The $450 million received so far, half of which came from the United States, falls far short of what is needed.

“Our plan is to provide assistance to at least 15.7 million people, and right now it will not be possible without these additional contributions,” said Mr. Alakbarov, speaking via videoconference to journalists in New York on July 15.

The developments are occurring as the deadline for foreign troops to fully withdraw from the country approaches. The drought, the second in three years, and ongoing military response in the wake of a “spring offensive” by the Taliban have uprooted some 270,000 people who have fled rural areas for urban centres.

According to UN News, in the northern city of Kunduz, for example, roughly 35,000 displaced people are being housed in schools and public buildings, and need food, water and sanitation. The fundamentalist Taliban who have been fighting the internationally-recognized central Government for years, have taken over all districts surrounding the city. 

Meanwhile, neighbouring countries, such as Iran, have been deporting Afghan refugees from their territories. Humanitarians are also witnessing “very intensive” population movements in areas near the borders with Iran and Pakistan, which are now largely closed.

The closures have not yet affected humanitarians as aid stocks are sufficient to last through the end of August.

Over several weeks, Mr. Alakbarov has visited five regions of Afghanistan. The UN official was particularly concerned about the plight of women and girls, who are facing “very difficult conditions”.

He recalled speaking with the head of a household in Kandahar, located in the south, where families are moving in groups comprising some 50 to 60 relatives. 

“I have asked how many women there were pregnant and delivered in the last three months while they were there on the move,” he said. “In that extended family, four women have delivered babies.  Three of them died.”

Although humanitarians continue to operate in most of Afghanistan’s 405 districts, Mr. Alakbarov reported an increase in access difficulties and in violence.

Twenty-five humanitarian workers have been killed since the start of year, and 63 injured, a 30 per cent increase over 2020. Victims have included women health workers and de-miners.

More than 1,000 “interferences”, threats and access impediments have been reported so far this year, which is equal to the 2020 total. [IDN-InDepthNews – 15 July 2021]

Photo: A young market vendor sells peanuts in Urozgan, a central province of Afghanistan. © UNICEF/Omid Fazel

IDN is the flagship agency of the Non-profit International Press Syndicate.

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