UN relief chief stresses need to stay and deliver for all Afghans

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
UN Humanitarian Coordinator Martin Griffiths, who briefed ambassadors, reported on the ongoing hardships and uncertainty facing Afghans,
nearly half of whom & 24 million people & require aid relief to survive.&Afghanistan&s crisis is a humanitarian crisis, but it&s not only
that
It&s an economic crisis
It&s a climate crisis
It&s a hunger crisis
It&s a financial crisis
But it&s not a hopeless crisis,& he said.Although conflict, poverty, climate shocks and food insecurity have long been a &sad reality& for
Afghanistan, Griffiths outlined why the current situation is so critical.Firstly, large-scale development assistance has been halted for a
year in a country that was already facing severe levels of food insecurity and malnutrition, which have only deteriorated.Humanitarians are
also confronting an &exceptionally challenging& operating environment, he added, as engaging with the authorities is &labour
intensive&.Furthermore, there is no confidence in the domestic banking sector which has sparked a liquidity crisis, that has affected aid
delivery, he said.A Humanitarian Exchange Facility intended to partially alleviate the liquidity crisis, is still being negotiated with
Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan leaders.Meanwhile women and girls &have been pushed to the sidelines&, Griffiths added.&In the 21st century,
we should not need to explain why girls& education and women&s empowerment are important to them, to their communities, to their countries,
and indeed to all of us,& he said.He stressed that preserving basic service delivery alongside humanitarian assistance &remains the only way
to prevent a catastrophe even greater than what we have seen these many months.&He reported that poverty is still deepening, the population
continues to grow, and the authorities have no budget to invest in their own future, making it clear that &some development support needs to
be restarted&.A $4.4 billion Humanitarian Response Plan for Afghanistan currently has a gap of $3.14 billion, he said.With winter
approaching, more than $600 million is urgently needed to support priority preparedness activities, such as upgrades and repairs to
shelters, as well as provision of warm clothes and blankets.Additionally, $154 million is needed to pre-position supplies, including food
and livelihood assistance, before the winter weather cuts off access to some areas of the country.&The people of Afghanistan are still there
They have shown incredible resilience over the decades and in this last year
Our task is to help them to prosper, to flourish and to be safe,& said Griffiths, who also called for action by the IEA
authorities.&Bureaucratic interferences and procedures slow down humanitarian assistance when it is needed most
Female humanitarian aid workers & both national and international & must be allowed to work unhindered and securely
And girls must be allowed to continue their education.&Markus Potzel, the Secretary-General&s Acting Special Representative for Afghanistan,
reported on the UN&s ongoing engagement with the IEA, as well as efforts towards promoting inclusive governance, rights and freedoms.He said
the IEA has been &ambiguous& as to the extent to which they want to engage, predicated on being in accordance with their interpretation of
Sharia law.Potzel underlined the vital need to move &beyond an exchange of hardened positions& towards a sustained dialogue between the IEA,
other Afghan stakeholders, the wider region and the international community.&Such dialogue must place the interests of all Afghans at its
centre,& he advised.&The future stability of Afghanistan rests on meeting the needs of the Afghan people, preserving their rights, and
reflecting the country&s diversity in all governance structures.&The post UN relief chief stresses need to stay and deliver for all Afghans
first appeared on Ariana News.