Caritas is appealing for US$2,977,520 (⬠2 million) to help Afghans combat the
ongoing effects of droughts and floods as well as preparing them for the imminent harsh winter.
The appeal will provide immediate relief through food aid and employment programmes. It
will also help families decrease their vulnerability through training, community projects and sponsoring greenhouses and providing essential items such as tools, seeds and fertiliser. The project aims
to directly support 60,000 people in the provinces of Bamyan, Ghor and Herat.
Caritas will also support Afghan communities through womenâs livelihoods projects, snow
clearing and through the construction of irrigation structures and roads.
âOften overlooked in discussions on Afghanistan is the widespread poverty and vulnerability.
Regular natural and man-made shocks can push poor families and whole communities to the brink of survival. Families adopt negative strategies to survive, which undermine future efforts, and lead to a
steady decline for those involved,â said Scott Braunschweig, Catholic Relief Services (a US member of Caritas) Kabul representative.
Years of drought and a severe
winter in 2008 have devastated communities in western and central Afghanistan. This combined with the food and economic crises, has left many families in need. Households in farming communities have
borrowed money and sold off assets such as cattle and sheep to cope with the crises.
Caritas surveys in the past few months have shown the majority of families in these rural
communities remain heavily in debt and on average hold less than half the livestock that they had two years ago.
Severe winter weather in Afghanistan can leave people cut off from
help. In such cases, they also may sell cattle and tools to buy food to keep them from going hungry.
The Caritas programme aims to sustain and help rebuild rural communities affected by
the drought and the severe winter leading up to the harvest next year.
For more information, please contact Michelle Hough on +39 06 69879721/+39 334 2344136 or hough@caritas.va
[ Any views expressed in this article are those of the writer and not of Reuters. ]
A man stacks boxes of food aid in Laoag, Ilocos Norte, northern Philippines, October 23, 2009. Typhoon Lupit, which means "fierce" in Filipino,weakened and slowed down as it moved closer to ...