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AfghanistanAsiaNEWS

Don’t deny Afghans their right to life, says UN envoy

SRI NewsDesk
By SRI NewsDesk Published November 11, 2021
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UNITED NATIONS: Pakistan prompted the transnational community on Wednesday not to allow politics to deny the right to life to the people of Afghanistan.

“ The Afghan people need massive and unconditional philanthropic backing from the transnational community to avoid a major mortal catastrophe,” said Pakistan’s UN Ambassador Munir Akram while prompting the world body to act now.

“ Financial liquidity must be handed to Afghanistan, including by releasing its frozen means, to help its profitable collapse and the pauperism of its suffering people,” he added. “ Politics mustn’t deny the right to life of the Afghan people.”

On Tuesday, Prime Minister Imran Khan appealed to the transnational community to help forestall a philanthropic extremity in Afghanistan as it faces multiple challenges.

Prime Minister Khan also drew attention to the World Food Programme’s (WFP) alert about the deteriorating philanthropic situation in Afghanistan, saying the world community has a “ moral obligation” to shield off the disaster defying Afghan people.”

In a report issued this week, WFP advised that Afghanistan was getting the world’s largest philanthropic extremity, with the country’s requirements surpassing those of the other worst-hit countries — Ethiopia, South Sudan, Syria, and indeed Yemen.

WFP lately transferred a fact-chancing charge to Afghanistan and is now ramping up its support to help nearly 23 million people in the country that need immediate food inventories.

“ Energy costs are over, food prices are soaring, the toxin is more precious, and all of this feeds into new heads like the one unfolding now in Afghanistan,” said WFP Executive Director David Beasley while participating in the findings during a virtual new briefing.

WFP estimates that as numerous as22.8 million people now face acute food instability in Afghanistan — including8.7 million facing exigency situations of food instability.

“ WFP has noway seen these numerous people facing exigency situations of food instability in the country, in the 10 times” that the UN agency has been conducting food checks in Afghanistan. The WFP report also advised that across the globe, a total of 45 million people were on the point of shortage across 43 countries. And 15 million further people were added to this list of at-threat populations after the COVID-19 epidemic. This number has risen from 42 million earlier in the time and 27 million in 2019.

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