UN urges Canada, allies to address unprecedented hunger in Afghanistan
OTTAWA — The United Nations is predicting dire hunger for more than half of Afghanistan’s people in the coming months unless Canada and its Western allies step up with greater financial support.
Monday’s joint report of the UN Food and Agriculture Organization and the World Food Program says 22.8 million Afghans face acute hunger in the coming months, the highest level of need seen in a decade.The WFP says it will need as much as $272 million per month to cover a funding shortfall so it can deliver food aid.
The UN appeal for more funds comes as financial resources appear to be drying up to keep safe houses open in Kabul to protect and feed some 1,700 Afghans who have approval to come to Canada but remain trapped in the Taliban-controlled country.
Many of those Afghans and their families face reprisals from the Taliban for helping Canada, the United States and their NATO allies by working as interpreters.

