The humanitarian catastrophe didn't begin with the Taliban's takeover in August.
The country is enduring its second severe drought in 3 years, Covid lockdowns hit the economy hard, and endless war sent hundreds of thousands into camps or urban poverty.
(c: Rahmat Gul)
But the Taliban's stunning victory and the international community's response have pitched the country into economic free fall.
International officials say few countries were so dependent on foreign aid.
Three-quarters of Afghanistan's government budget was paid for by foreign donors and international aid amounted to some two-fifths of GDP.
That funding stopped overnight when Ashraf Ghani's government fled.
Hundreds of thousands of civil servants, former police and soldiers, teachers and doctors and nurses have gone unpaid.
(c: Khodaiberdi Sadat)
Many of the Taliban's leadership are on foreign sanctions lists, including Sirajuddin Haqqani, the interior minister, who has a $10m bounty on his head.
International banks are refusing transactions with Afghan banks for fear they will be breaking restrictions.
The UN estimates it needs to provide more than $200m of humanitarian aid a month to avert disaster.
But this will only keep people alive and will not dig the economy out of its hole.
(c: Hector Retamal)
The Taliban appear to have no plans to deal with the crisis, except calling for America to end sanctions and release $9bn of frozen foreign reserves.
(c: Hector Retamal)
Doctors fear the fragile improvements in infant and maternal mortality and life expectancy will collapse at the same time as the state built up over the past two decades.
Fifty million people are trapped in modern slavery – and experts now fear that the mounting cost of living crisis could exacerbate the problem further.
According to the International Labour Organisation, compounding crises including the coronavirus pandemic, climate change and conflict have heightened the risk of modern slavery.
Since 2016, when estimates were last released, the number of people trapped in modern slavery on any given day has jumped by roughly 9.3m, with 28m living in forced labour – including more than 3.3m children – and 22m in forced marriages.
Wet markets, ranging from roadside stalls to sprawling warehouses full of live produce, are infamous for keeping stressed wild animals in crammed conditions.
While they have long been considered “disease incubators”, Covid has thrown a fresh spotlight on the threat they pose.
🧪 Researchers collected 700 samples from wild animals in Laos.
Among the pathogens lurking in the specimens was Leptospira, which causes flu-like chills, muscle pains and is one of the main causes of fever in rural Laos.
More than one fifth of the tested animals were infected.
Somalia is descending into a “repeat of the 2011 famine”, as livestock die en-masse and crops wither away in the worst drought to hit the region for 40 years.
@sneweyy@Harrietmbarber Three consecutive years of little or no rainfall have devastated harvests and led to major shortages of food and water across the country, plunging markets into turmoil.
@sneweyy@Harrietmbarber Meanwhile, global prices have hit a new high – rising by 34 per cent year on year, the fastest rate in 14 years.
This could worsen an already stark situation in Somalia, which imports almost all of its wheat from Russia and Ukraine.
Eritrean refugees have a long and tangled history in northern Ethiopia. They first arrived in 2000, when a border war between the two countries was killing tens of thousands.
Over the last two decades, tens of thousands kept arriving, fleeing the rule of Eritrea's dictator.
New images show thousands of shell-shocked men, women and children arriving in Ethiopia's Afar region, after an alleged attack on a camp in Tigray.
"Heavy weapons were thrown into camp, and Tigray forces controlled the area. The same day they started looting," said one survivor.
Photographed below, a man lifts his shirt to show the foot-long scar from selling his kidney; his son, brow furrowed, looks at his father’s face.
As extreme hunger tightens its grip on Afghanistan, parents are sacrificing their bodies to feed their young. telegraph.co.uk/global-health/…
Illegal organ trading existed before the Taliban takeover in August 2021, but the black market has exploded after millions more were plunged into poverty due to international sanctions.
Pictured: Afghan men who scars from selling kidneys. Credit: @kohsar
Current @UN estimates suggest more than 24m people – 59 per cent of the population – are in need of lifesaving humanitarian aid, 30 per cent higher than in 2021.
“I had to do it for the sake of my children,” 32-year-old Nooruddin told news agency AFP from Herat.