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FEATURE-Thousands of Afghans face cold, hungry winter as aid goes missing

pakistani342

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While Afghan elites line their pockets with money -- poor Afghans go hungry.

I have to say for all of Pakistan's troubles, the 3 million or so Afghan refugees at least don't face this fate.

Further, as the boat sinks, one hears shrill pitched shrieks of how Afghan national identity will overcome all -- I guess Afghan national identity is not strong enough to help the hungry -- but it is strong enough to burn Pakistani Flags.

Afghanistan zendabod!!! --- disgusting!

original article here, excerpt below

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HERAT, Afghanistan, Jan 18 (Reuters) - Thousands of homeless Afghans are huddling on the sides of freezing roads this winter with little shelter and nothing to eat, not far from warehouses stuffed with food.

The government's inability to help - through mismanagement, corruption, or factors beyond its control - threatens the future of a united Afghanistan after an April presidential election and the withdrawal of foreign combat troops by the end of this year.
 
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wont be surprised if the ration is going on feeding the TTP scums in pakistan !
 
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Are you really THAT ignorant?

ON Topic.

We should send some food and winter clothes to the Afghans.

Very good idea.

I'd be interested to know what avenues in Pakistan people have to help Afghans.

I'll do a check here in the US if there are campaigns to help poor Afghans through the winter.
 
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Very good idea.

I'd be interested to know what avenues in Pakistan people have to help Afghans.

I'll do a check here in the US if there are campaigns to help poor Afghans through the winter.

If govt or NGOs start a drive, Pakistanis will contribute.
 
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wont be surprised if the ration is going on feeding the TTP scums in pakistan !

Yeah that is possible.

I am just know the Hindu-stanies had nothing to do with this; the food contained first class proteins in the form of flesh and eggs.
 
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I am just know the Hindu-stanies had nothing to do with this; the food contained first class proteins in the form of flesh and eggs.
Hindus also eat eggs,flesh...........:lol:
 
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Hope they are helped by Pakistan.

Just a quick update on this.

Unfortunately I could not find any international organization that seems to have a specific camping for Afghans suffering from food shortage in the winter.

I checked the following and some others.

1. Red Cross / Red Crescent
Could not find anything current -- appeals are from last year (2013's) earthquake and floods
2. Muslim Hands -- does work in Afghanistan but no specific campaign that I could find.
3. World Food Program -- does work in Afghanistan but no specific campaign that I could find.
4. Freedom from Hunger -- does not work in Afghanistan it seems.
5. Food for the Hungry -- does not work in Afghanistan
 
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Awww ... which ones ?

I mean, which class of Hindus in the elaborate caste system eats "Maas .. Machi " ?
Everybody except Brahmins.........
Nowdays a good percentage of Brahmins have also started eating "Maas... ..Machi"
People dont take religion seriously in India.....:lol:
I am a Hindu and i have gone to temple only two times since last 3 to 4 years that also not for praying but for seeing girls..... :lol:
 
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Everybody except Brahmins.........
Nowdays a good percentage of Brahmins have also started eating "Maas... ..Machi"
People dont take religion seriously in India.....:lol:
I am a Hindu and i have gone to temple only two times since last 3 to 4 years that also not for praying but for seeing girls..... :lol:

chalo .. you are a good boy.
 
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Rising Above Vengeance
Salt and Terror in Afghanistan
by KATHY KELLY
In late January in a room in Kabul, Afghanistan, I joined several dozen people, working seamstresses, some college students, socially engaged teenagers and a few visiting internationals like myself, to discuss world hunger. Our emphasis was not exclusively on their own country’s worsening hunger problems. The Afghan Peace Volunteers, in whose home we were meeting, draw strength from looking beyond their own very real struggles.

With us was Hakim, a medical doctor who spent six years working as a public health specialist in the central highlands of Afghanistan and, prior to that, among refugees in Quetta, Pakistan. He helped us understand conditions that lead to food shortages and taught us about diseases, such as kwashiorkor and marasmus, which are caused by insufficient protein or general malnutrition.

We looked at UN figures about hunger in Afghanistan, which show malnutrition rates rising by 50 percent or more compared with 2012. The malnutrition ward at Helmand Province’s Bost Hospital has been admitting 200 children a month for severe, acute malnutrition — four times more than in January 2012.

A recent New York Times article about the worsening hunger crisis described an encounter with a mother and child in an Afghan hospital: “In another bed is Fatima, less than a year old, who is so severely malnourished that her heart is failing, and the doctors expect that she will soon die unless her father is able to find money to take her to Kabul for surgery. The girl’s face bears a perpetual look of utter terror, and she rarely stops crying.”

Photos of Fatima and other children in the ward accompanied the article. In our room in Kabul, Hakim projected the photos on the wall. They were painful to see and so were the nods of comprehension from Afghans all too familiar with the agonies of poverty in a time of war.

As children grow, they need iodine to enable proper brain development. According to a UNICEF/GAIN report, “iodine deficiency is the most prevalent cause of brain damage worldwide. It is easily preventable, and through ongoing targeted interventions, can be eliminated.” As recently as 2009 we learned that 70 percent of Afghan children faced an iodine deficiency.

Universal Salt Iodization (USI) is recognized as a simple, safe and cost-effective measure in addressing iodine deficiency. The World Bank reports that it costs $.05 per child, per year.

In 2012, the World Food Programme (WFP) and the Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition (GAIN) announced a four-year projectwhich aimed to reach nearly half of Afghanistan’s population – 15 million Afghans – with fortified foods. Their strategy was to add vitamins and minerals such as iron, zinc, folic acid, Vitamin B-12 and Vitamin A to wheat flour, vegetable oil and ghee, and also to fortify salt with iodine. The project costs $6.4 million.

The sums of money required to fund delivery of iodine and fortified foods to malnourished Afghan children should be compared, I believe, to the sums of money that the Pentagon’s insatiable appetite for war-making has required of U.S. people.

The price tag for supplying iodized salt to one child for one year is 5 cents.

The cost of maintaining one U.S. soldier has recently risen to $2.1 million per year. The amount of money spent to keep three U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan in 2014 could almost cover the cost of a four-year program to deliver fortified foods to 15 million Afghan people.

Maj. Gen. Kurt J. Stein, who is overseeing the drawdown of U.S. troops from Afghanistan, has referred to the operation as “the largest retrograde mission in history.” The mission will cost as much as $6 billion.

Over the past decade, spin doctors for U.S. military spending have suggested that Afghanistan needs the U.S. troop presence and U.S. non-military spending to protect the interests of women and children.

It’s true that non-military aid to Afghanistan, sent by the U.S. since 2002, now approaches $100 billion.

Several articles on Afghanistan’s worsening hunger crisis, appearing in the Western press, prompt readers to ask how Afghanistan could be receiving vast sums of non-military aid and yet still struggle with severe acute malnourishment among children under age five.

However, a 2013 quarterly report to Congress submitted by the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan shows that, of the nearly $100 billion spent on wartime reconstruction, $97 billion has been spent on counter-narcotics, security, “governance/development” and “oversight and operations.” No more than $3 billion, a hundred dollars per Afghan person, were used for “humanitarian” projects – to help keep 30 million Afghans alive through 12 years of U.S. war and occupation.

Funds have been available for tanks, guns, bullets, helicopters, missiles, weaponized drones, drone surveillance, Joint Special Operations task forces, bases, airstrips, prisons, and truck-delivered supplies for tens of thousands of troops. But funds are in short supply for children too weak to cry who are battling for their lives while wasting away.

A whole generation of Afghans and other people around the developing world see the true results of Westerners’ self-righteous claim for the need to keep civilians “safe” through war. They see the terror, entirely justified, filling Fatima’s eyes in her hospital bed.

In that room in Kabul, as my friends learned about the stark realities of hunger¾and among them, I know, were some who worry about hunger in their own families¾I could see a rejection both of panic and of revenge in the eyes of the people around me. Their steady thoughtfulness was an inspiration.

Panic and revenge among far more prosperous people in the U.S. helped to drive the U.S. into a war waged against one of the poorest countries in the world. Yet, my Afghan friends, who’ve borne the brunt of war, long to rise above vengeance and narrow self-interest.


They wish to pursue a peace that includes ending hunger.


Kathy Kelly (Kathy@vcnv.org) co-coordinates Voices for Creative Nonviolence (www.vcnv.org). While in Kabul, she is a guest of the Afghan Peace Volunteers, www.ourjourneytosmile.com
 
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