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Humanitarian Crisis: Parents put up children for sale as Taliban plunge Afghanistan into poverty, verges on collapse

As Afghanistan faces its worst humanitarian crisis under The Taliban, parents have started selling their children in order to get money to feed.

Already, the United Nations’ World Food Programme (WFP) has warned that millions of Afghans, including children, could die of starvation unless urgent action is taken to pull Afghanistan back from the brink of collapse.

The WFP called for frozen funds to be freed for humanitarian efforts.

Afghanistan have been plunged into humanitarian crisis few months after the Taliban took control of the country following the withdrawal of American troops.

A BBC reporter, Yogita Limaye, spoke to a mother who sold her infant for $500 to get money to feed the other children.

The buyer whose name was not mentioned and intentions not guaranteed, claimed he wanted to raise the girl to marry his son.

“He paid $250 upfront, enough to feed the family for a few months, and will pay the rest when he returns to collect the baby ‘once she can walk. My other children were dying of huger so we had to sell my daughter. How can I not be sad? She is my child. I wish I didn’t have to sell my daughter,” the woman was quoted to have said.

The father, who used to collect rubbish and is unable to earn any money now, said they had to do because they had no choice.

“We are starving. Right now we have no flour, no oil at home. We have nothing. My daughter doesn’t know what her future will be. I don’t know how she’ll feel about it. But I had to do it.”

Eight children were reported to have starved to death in the capital of Kabul this week.

A house cleaner in western Afghanistan named Saleha, sold her 3-year-old daughter to a man to whom she owed a $550 debt.

Saleha, 40, receives 70 cents a day from her job, and her husband doesn’t work, according to Wall Street Journal.

“If life continues to be this awful, I will kill my children and myself,” Saleha told the Journal. “I don’t even know what we will eat tonight.”

“I will try to find money to save my daughter’s life,” husband Abdul Wahab said.

Khalid Ahmad, the lender, told the Journal he had to accept the 3-year-old girl to settle the debt.

WFP Executive Director, David Beasley, told Reuters that 22.8 million people – more than half of Afghanistan’s 39 million population – were facing acute food insecurity and “marching to starvation” compared to 14 million just two months ago.

“Children are going to die. People are going to starve. Things are going to get a lot worse,” he said in Dubai.

“I don’t know how you don’t have millions of people, and especially children, dying at the rate we are going with the lack of funding and the collapsing of the economy.”

Afghanistan was plunged into crisis in August after Taliban fighters drove out a Western-backed government, prompting donors to hold back billions of dollars in assistance for the aid-dependent economy.

The food crisis, exacerbated by climate change, was dire in Afghanistan even before the takeover by the Taliban, whose new administration has been blocked from accessing assets held overseas as nations grapple with how to deal with the hardline Islamists.

“What we are predicting is coming true much faster than we anticipated. Kabul fell faster than anybody anticipated and the economy is falling faster than that,” Beasley said.

He said dollars earmarked for development assistance should be repurposed for humanitarian aid, which some nations have already done, or frozen funds be channelled through the agency.

“You’ve got to unfreeze these funds so people can survive.”

The U.N. food agency needs up to $220 million a month to partially feed the nearly 23 million vulnerable people as winter nears.

Many Afghans are selling possessions to buy food with the Taliban unable to pay wages to civil servants, and urban communities are facing food insecurity on levels similar to rural areas for the first time.

WFP tapped its own resources to help cover food aid through to December after some donors failed to meet pledges, Beasley said, adding that with government appropriations already out, funds may have to be redirected from aid efforts in other countries.

Aid groups are urging countries, concerned about human rights under the Taliban, to engage with the new rulers to prevent a collapse they say could trigger a migration crisis similar to the 2015 exodus from Syria that shook Europe.

“I don’t think the leaders in the world realise what is coming their way,” he said, listing off several humanitarian crises in the Middle East, Africa and Central America.

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