Friday, November 18, 2011

Up to 3 million Afghans face hunger as winter looms

Up to three million people in Afghanistan are facing hunger, malnutrition and disease after a severe drought wiped out their crops and extreme winter weather risks cutting off their access to vital food aid, a group of aid agencies warned Friday.

Poor rains earlier this year destroyed 80 percent of wheat crops in the country's north, northeast and west, leaving impoverished farming communities with little food to eat, said the nine charities which included Oxfam and Save the Children.

With food prices almost doubling since last year, families are being forced to skip meals, borrow money or migrate.

Access to life-saving aid is now in jeopardy as heavy snowfall will, within weeks, block roads and risk avalanches.

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"Villagers are telling us that this year the drought has destroyed everything. Their food stocks are already low, and they are worried about how they will get through the coming months," Oxfam's country director Manohar Shenoy said in a statement.

Slideshow: Afghanistan: Nation at a crossroads (on this page)

"Time is running out to be able to provide communities with the help they most desperately need before a harsh winter makes many areas inaccessible," he added. "Snow is already falling and many mountainous areas are likely to be cut off within weeks."

Children put to work
Afghanistan's harsh winter, which lasts from November to March, often results in heavy snowfall of up to 13 feet deep, blocking remote mountain passes and leaving hundreds of thousands of villagers isolated for months.

As winter sets in, people are feeling the effects of the drought by cutting down on m

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45352478/ns/world_news-south_and_central_asia/

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