Dubai, Jan 14 : More
violence and a worsening humanitarian situation are likely in Afghanistan in
2013, say aid agencies.
“The worsening conflict trends over the last five
years indicate that civilians will continue to suffer because of armed violence
and that the humanitarian situation will deteriorate,” says the new Common
Humanitarian Action Plan (CHAP) for 2013, published by the UN Office for the
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).
The report brings together
the major humanitarian challenges facing the country in 2013, a year that will
see the continued withdrawal of international forces: Afghan security forces
will take control of three-quarters of the country by June.
Afghanistan
has some of the worst humanitarian indicators in the world - 34 percent of the
population are food insecure and 10 percent of children die before they start
primary school.
With many Afghans lacking access to rudimentary
government services like basic education, water, primary health services and
housing, the humanitarian community is requesting US$471 million to cover the
cost of projects in 2013.
Many analysts think the steady withdrawal of
international forces in 2013, ahead of full withdrawal in 2014, will lead to an
upsurge in violence as anti-government forces capitalize on their stronger
position vis-à-vis national security forces.
The strength of these
national forces is disputed. Some analysts saw “significant improvements within
the Afghan military” in 2012, while the CHAP points to high levels of desertion
and low levels of re-enlistment, meaning that a third of the Afghan force needs
replacing each year.
While civilian deaths and injuries declined by 4
percent in the first 10 months of 2012 compared to the same period in 2011,
according to the UN Assistant Mission to Afghanistan (UNAMA), targeted attacks
on civilians by anti-government forces increased by 53 percent in the first half
of 2012, and overall, violence in 2012 has spread increasingly beyond southern
and eastern areas.
Over the last few years the space for humanitarian
work has reduced, especially as anti-government forces have radicalized and
fragmented: aid workers say air transport is frequently the only safe way to
reach remote areas.
However, the international pullout may also provide
opportunities for more independent aid work and greater differentiation from the
Provincial Reconstruction Teams (PRTs), which operate closely with the
government and military.
Aid groups increasingly have to work in areas
where the Taliban and other non-government actors operate, making perceived
neutrality crucial.
Many international organizations opt to manage
projects from Kabul and work through local NGOs, says a recent report by the
Overseas Development Institute.
“The privileged humanitarian access
enjoyed by national NGOs should be more fully exploited,” Suzanne Murray-Jones,
senior adviser with the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) in Afghanistan, told IRIN,
saying that they often need capacity-building and adequate funding to do the
job.
To ensure that humanitarian work is carried out in the provinces
with the greatest need, the 2013 CHAP plan introduces a ranking of provinces by
assessed humanitarian need, to avoid aid being directed at areas that are either
easy to reach or politically important.
If humanitarian challenges in
2013 were limited to conflict, they would be serious enough. But Afghanistan is
also frequently a victim of natural disasters, which on average affect around a
quarter of a million Afghans each year.
Harsh winters, deadly avalanches,
earthquakes, landslides, droughts and floods leave nearly half of Afghanistan’s
districts hazard-prone.
The last 12 months saw a good wheat harvest but
with droughts in eight out of the last 11 years, a poor harvest looks probable
in the coming year, according to the CHAP 2013 report.
Oxfam’s
Afghanistan associate country director Kate O'Rourke says years of conflict have
worn down people’s coping mechanisms: “Investing in projects designed to reduce
the impact of disasters and improve people's resilience and their ability to
deal with crises when they do occur is key. Only then will Afghans who are at
risk be better prepared and able to cope, instead of being affected by
reoccurring humanitarian `spot fires' that they are constantly trying to recover
from, as they are now."
Economic growth has been around 7 percent over
the last few years, but opportunities remain few and the private sector is
hamstrung by the lack of a reliable electricity supply.
While large
mining projects are being planned, the aid effort and the tens of thousands of
international troops that make up a key part of the economy are set to reduce in
size in the coming years.
“Afghanistan is entering a very challenging
period that will likely be characterized by growing economic vulnerability
resulting from a reduction in international assistance and the pullout of most
international forces that is expected to translate into significant economic
contraction and job losses,” said Mark Bowden, the humanitarian coordinator for
Afghanistan.
Afghanistan is the world’s most aid-dependent country, with
aid worth around $15.7 billion per year, roughly the same as the national GDP.
The World Bank estimates that 6-10 percent of the population have worked in
aid-financed employment.
Four decades of conflict in Afghanistan have
been one of the key drivers of displacement, creating substantial refugee
populations requiring support.
Around 2.7 million Afghans live in
Pakistan and Iran, while within the country, 450,000 people are displaced; 34
percent of them newly displaced in the first three-quarters of
2012.
Meanwhile, UNHCR say nearly six million refugees have returned to
Afghanistan in the last decade, something that has put considerable pressure on
the economy and services.
“Many are being perceived as not having reached
parity with other members of the communities in which they are living, and there
is a possibility of additional unplanned, large-scale return,” said Murray-Jones
at UNHCR.
To manage these needs in 2013, the humanitarian community is
requesting $471 million, an increase on 2012 when the Consolidated Appeals
Process (CAP) was $448 million.
In a sign of donor fatigue and the
pressure on leading donor country budgets due to the global economic slowdown,
humanitarian funding dropped by around half in 2012.
Afghanistan was the
fourth-least funded humanitarian crisis, as a percentage, among the 22 global
appeals, although at least $270 million in aid is provided annually outside the
CAP funding mechanism.
Ends
SA/EN
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