Home WebMail | Calgary | 16.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Action News
  • World
    • Asia
    • Europe
    • Africa
    • Americas
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Contact
  • Breaking News
  • Latest Updates
  • Featured
  • Live
  • Live Now
  • Former Kenyan PM Raila Odinga has died aged 80
  • House filmed floating to sea after Typhoon Halong hits Alaska’s coast
  • What do we know about the Trump plan to disarm Hamas?
  • After ‘military coup’, Madagascar faces uncertain future
  • ‘We don’t want power, we want light’: Madagascar awaits post-Rajoelina era
  • How US funding has made Israel’s wars possible
  • Why has the US arrested Indian-American analyst Ashley Tellis?
  • Syria seeks to ‘redefine’ Russia ties, al-Sharaa tells Putin in Moscow
  • All to know about FIFA World Cup 2026 – teams, qualifying, format, draw
  • Is your beef linked to Amazon deforestation? A report highlights loopholes
  • US, China impose port fees: Is a return to all-out trade war imminent?
  • Video: Freed Palestinian detainee returns to the ruins of his Gaza home
  • What is nihilistic violent extremism, blamed for most mass shootings in US?
  • Fighting escalates on border between Pakistan and Afghanistan
  • Video: Netanyahu testifies in corruption trial as protests held in Tel Aviv
  • How Israel plans to continue the war without its army
  • Israeli arson, bulldozers and forced labour in the West Bank’s Tulkarem
  • India’s Himalayan villages slowly reviving decades after conflict
  • Police break up pro-Palestine protests during Italy-Israel qualifier
  • Kenyan opposition leader Raila Odinga dies of heart attack in India at 80
  • Timelapse video shows Indonesian volcano erupting
  • Far-right US influencer Candace Owens loses legal fight to enter Australia
  • ‘Surveillance pricing’: Why you might be paying more than your neighbour
  • How successful is Ukraine’s ‘gas war’ against Russia?
  • Protesters in Italy demand Israel boycott before World Cup qualifier

Photos: Afghans paying the price for peace since Taliban takeover

By Al Jazeera Published 2022-08-10 03:02 Updated 2022-08-10 04:50 Source: Al Jazeera

Rows of mud huts put together in a rush. Plastic roofs popping out in the dusty spaces. Improvised tents tucked into the corners of narrow streets.

Millions of displaced and impoverished people in Afghanistan have found a safe haven in the enclaves around bigger cities, which over time have grown into slum-like areas.

Today, these crowded spaces host entire communities driven out of their homes by decades of conflict, disasters and political instability.

It is also here that one can meet people hit the hardest by the sudden economic collapse which followed the end of the war in Afghanistan – the highest price that most Afghans have been paying for peace.

The world was unprepared for the lightning-quick takeover of Kabul by the Taliban in August last year. The international community felt it was left with few options but to cut off Afghanistan’s main lifeline – foreign aid, which the country had historically been almost entirely dependent on.

Over the past year, millions of lives have been hit by the strict measures leading to the withdrawal of development support and limitations imposed on the country’s financial systems.

The liquidity crisis, cash shortages, the collapse of the banking system and Western sanctions – for the displaced people dwelling in makeshift settlements, the complex financial terms circulating in the Afghan context stand for only one thing: shocking levels of poverty.

Staggering numbers of Afghans are unable to access their salaries or lifetime savings, while the increased costs of living and scarce job opportunities have driven entire families into mounting debt.

Most people have nothing to spend and shrinking demand for basic goods has forced small businesses to shut down. In the shadow of the Ukraine war, the prices of food and essential products have skyrocketed, placing them out of reach for the destitute communities.

There are approximately 2.5 million people living in Afghanistan’s slums. For them and many others across the country, survival is a struggle and the daily price they are paying for this fragile peace.

*This photo essay is provided by the Norwegian Refugee Council