Kuwait Times

Climate change ‘now worse’ than war for Afghan farmers

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BALA MURGHAB: Drought stalks the parched fields around the remote Afghan district of Bala Murghab, where climate change is proving a deadlier foe than the country’s recent conflicts. As the world watched the Taleban wage a stunning offensive that ended in the rapid collapse of the country’s western-backed government, a longer-term crisis was building.

In desperate attempts to feed their families, herders have been forced to sell their livestock, farmers to flee their villages and parents to sell their daughters into marriage at ever younger ages. “The last time I saw rain was last year, and there wasn’t much,” Mullah Fateh, head of the Haji Rashid Khan village in Bala Murghab. Communitie­s cling to life in small clusters of mud-brick homes among an endless ocean of rolling brown hills in this corner of Badghis province - where 90 percent of the 600,000-strong population live off livestock or fields, according to humanitari­an agency ACTED. “We sold sheep to buy food, others died of thirst,” Fateh told AFP. When the first of two recent droughts hit in 2018, he had 300 sheep, but as the latest dry spell bites, he’s down to 20. Yesterday, UN agencies said more than 22 million Afghans will suffer “acute food insecurity” this winter, warning the unstable country faces one of the world’s worst humanitari­an crises.

Aid-dependent Afghanista­n, which has spent decades trapped in cycles of war, has borne the sixth hardest blow from climate change, driven by greenhouse emissions such as CO2, according to a study by environmen­tal group Germanwatc­h. An Afghan lifestyle causes 0.2 tons of CO2 emissions per year, compared to 15 from the average American, World Bank figures show. As predicted, one of the devastatin­g effects has been a drop in rainfall in northern Afghanista­n.

When Mullah Fateh needs to fetch water, he sends young boys and men on a day-long trip with a donkey. This year, he said, two young shepherds died of thirst in the hills. The thirst attacks not just the body, but family bonds. This year 20 families in Haji Rashid Khan village, which has no school and no clinic, sold their very young daughters into marriage, to raise money for food. “The rest of the children were hungry and thirsty,” explained Bibi Yeleh, a mother of seven whose 15-year-old daughter is already married and whose seven-year-old will soon follow. If the drought continues, she said, a two and a five-year-old will be next, to be handed over to the groom’s family when they are older. Around 45 of roughly 165 families in the village and tens of thousands across the province have been displaced this year into miserable camps on the outskirts of larger towns.

 ?? — AFP ?? BALA MURGHAB: Children wash clothes in Bala Murghab district of Badghis province.
— AFP BALA MURGHAB: Children wash clothes in Bala Murghab district of Badghis province.

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