Cuts to funding for Afghanistan obstruct earthquake response
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An injured victim of an earthquake being shifted to a hospital in Jalalabad, Afghanistan.
PHOTO: EPA
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KABUL – The shrinking of funding for Afghanistan, led by US aid cuts, hampered the response on Sept 1 to a powerful earthquake in the east
The 6-magnitude tremor hit overnight, levelling villages, killing at least 800 people and injuring more than 2,800 in remote mountainside areas.
The ruling Taliban administration and aid officials have a daunting task of rescuing and helping thousands of Afghans with a tinier budget than ever and an economy in crisis.
“The actual delivery of response has been badly hit by the funding cuts this year, but also the number of people we have on the ground is much less than we would have had six months ago,” said Ms Kate Carey, deputy head of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs in Afghanistan.
It was the third major deadly quake since the Taliban took over in 2021 in a nation also reeling from conflict, droughts, floods and the pushback of 2.1 million Afghans by neighbouring countries.
Afghanistan has been badly affected since US President Donald Trump’s administration in January began funding cuts to its humanitarian arm USAid
But even before that, funding to Afghanistan was shrinking due to competing emergencies in areas such as Ukraine, Gaza and Sudan, as well as frustration from donor governments over the Taliban’s policies towards women, especially its restrictions on the work of Afghan female non-governmental organisation staff.
Humanitarian aid, aimed at bypassing political institutions to serve urgent needs, has shrunk to US$767 million (S$986 million) in 2025, down from US$3.8 billion in 2022.
The impact of the cuts was starkly illustrated by the latest crisis, Ms Carey said, with a creaking health system now dealing with thousands of patients hit by falling rubble.
A total of 44 health clinics catering to more than 363,000 people in Nangarhar and Kunar – the provinces worst affected by the quake – suspended operations or closed in 2025 due to US aid cuts, according to World Health Organisation figures.
No helicopter
Where in the past a helicopter would have taken health teams and supplies to remote villages accessible only by foot, funding cuts to the World Food Programme, which runs a humanitarian air service, put the aircraft out of commission earlier in 2025, Ms Carey said.
The Taliban has appealed for more aid in a country where half the population was already in need of urgent humanitarian assistance, according to UN estimates.
Afghan volunteers and Taliban security personnel evacuating an earthquake victim by a military helicopter from the Nurgal district of Kunar province.
PHOTO: AFP
“Support from the international community is seen as essential,” said Mr Abdul Rahman Habib, spokesman for the Taliban-run Ministry of Economy, noting the fall in funds for food, healthcare, displaced people and communities hit by climate change.
Aid has been a lifeline during Afghanistan’s global isolation under the Taliban, whose government has formally been recognised only by Russia. Sanctions on some of its leaders have hampered the banking sector, and the US has frozen billions in central bank assets.
The Taliban authorities do not publicly release their annual budget. The World Bank noted in April that although the authorities’ tax and revenue mobilisation had been relatively strong, it had not been enough to offset the sharp drop in aid.
Besides the global funding plunge, the UN and charities have to navigate a plethora of complex policies on operations under the Taliban, which says Afghan female aid staff should not work, though there are exemptions in health and education.
The Taliban, which has closed high schools and universities to female students and placed restrictions on their movement without a male guardian, says it respects women’s rights in accordance with its interpretation of Islamic law.
Ms Sherine Ibrahim, the International Rescue Committee’s Afghanistan director, said on Sept 1 that the funding cuts were a drag on the response to Afghanistan’s latest disaster.
“Although we have been able to act fast, we are profoundly fearful for the additional strain that this disaster will have on the overall humanitarian response in Afghanistan,” she said. REUTERS