Sohaila is a widow. She has six children, her youngest a 15-month-old girl named Husna Fakeeri. The tea that Sohaila refers to is what’s traditionally drunk in Afghanistan, made with green leaves and hot water, without any milk or sugar. It contains nothing that’s of any nutritional value for her baby.

Sohaila is one of the 10 million people who have stopped receiving emergency food assistance from the UN World Food Programme (WFP) over the past year - cuts necessitated by a massive funding shortfall. It’s a crushing blow, especially for the estimated two million households run by women in Afghanistan.

Under Taliban rule, Sohaila says she can’t go out to work and feed her family.

“There have been nights when we have had nothing to eat. I say to my children, where can I go begging at this time of night? They sleep in a state of hunger and when they wake up I wonder what I should do. If a neighbour brings us some food the children scramble, saying ‘give me, give me’. I try to split it between them to calm them down,” Sohaila says.

  • HobbitFoot
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    11 months ago

    So money was being spent, but the US led coalition was trying to push change too much in the society, which fought back over several decades, and the USAl was bad at spending the money in Afghanistan? And it isn’t like the US just left, but it was being pushed out both via a negotiated peace deal and eventually at gunpoint.

    You can advocate to give aid to the Taliban government currently running Afghanistan, but it isn’t like the US has the will or authority to do much more in the country currently.

    • girlfreddy@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      11 months ago

      The US was forcing/enforcing its own image on a sovereign nation who didn’t need or want that … just like they had so many times before. And it failed spectacularly like it had before.

      Maybe next time they’ll ask what help the people want and provide that instead … but if Biden’s demands on the Palestinian Authority are any indication, America hasn’t learned anything from its failures.

      • HobbitFoot
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        11 months ago

        It wasn’t like the Taliban were asking for help in 2001.

          • HobbitFoot
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            11 months ago

            But you’re going to have to go through the government if the help is against the wishes of it.

            • girlfreddy@sh.itjust.worksOP
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              11 months ago

              Why?

              There are always other ways to get the required info, like asking the tribal leaders what help they and their people wanted and/or needed.

              • qdJzXuisAndVQb2@lemm.ee
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                11 months ago

                I get the impression there was nothing the US government could have done that would have satisfied you.