Afghanistan food crisis 2026: 17 million face acute hunger as UN aid funds run dry

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Afghanistan food crisis 2026: 17 million face acute hunger as UN aid funds run dry

Synopsis

The UN warns that over 17 million Afghans face acute food insecurity in 2026 — yet the global humanitarian response plan is less than 20% funded. With 5 million migrants returning from Pakistan and Iran, women's access to healthcare collapsing, and a maternal mortality rate of 638 per 100,000 live births, Afghanistan is sliding toward a compounding catastrophe that the world is not paying enough to prevent.

Key Takeaways

The UN estimates more than 17 million Afghans will face acute food insecurity in 2026 .
Approximately 22 million people require humanitarian assistance, including food, healthcare, and protection services.
The UN 2026 Humanitarian Response Plan had received less than 20% of required funding by June 2026 .
More than 5 million Afghan migrants returning from Pakistan and Iran are adding pressure on already strained communities.
Over 10.7 million women and girls will need humanitarian aid in 2026, per OCHA .
Afghanistan's maternal mortality rate stands at an estimated 638 deaths per 100,000 live births as of 2024 .

More than 17 million people in Afghanistan are projected to face acute food insecurity in 2026, according to the United Nations, as international funding shortfalls force aid agencies to suspend or scale back life-saving food and healthcare programmes. The crisis, already one of the world's most severe, is deepening at a time when the country's humanitarian infrastructure is critically underfunded.

Scale of the Crisis

The UN estimates that approximately 22 million Afghans require humanitarian assistance this year — encompassing food, healthcare, and protection services. Women, children, internally displaced persons, and returning refugees are among the hardest hit. The UN's 2026 Humanitarian Response Plan had received less than 20 per cent of its required funding by June 2026, compelling organisations to suspend or curtail food distributions and essential health services, including some classified as life-saving.

Returning Migrants Add Pressure

According to Human Rights Watch (HRW), the return of more than 5 million Afghan migrants from Pakistan and Iran has placed additional strain on communities already struggling to meet basic needs. Fereshta Abbasi, an Afghan researcher at HRW, said deteriorating economic conditions are driving many families into extreme hardship. Drawing on interviews conducted across Afghanistan, she described parents unable to provide enough food for their children and households increasingly relying on neighbours for basic meals.

Women and Girls Disproportionately Affected

The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) warned in a report released on Tuesday that over 10.7 million women and girls will require humanitarian assistance in Afghanistan in 2026. Restrictions on women's movement, education, and employment continue to limit their access to essential services, while increasing protection risks and deepening existing vulnerabilities.

Afghanistan's maternal mortality rate remains among the world's highest, with an estimated 638 maternal deaths per 100,000 live births recorded in 2024, according to OCHA. Shortages of women health workers, funding reductions, limited access to essential medicines, and gaps in emergency obstetric care are contributing to preventable maternal and neonatal deaths — particularly in rural areas where healthcare access is already severely constrained.

Health Sector Under Severe Strain

The broader health sector is also under significant pressure. Funding cuts have triggered reductions in healthcare programmes across the country, compounding the impact of structural gaps in rural medical infrastructure. This comes amid a broader global trend of donor fatigue for protracted humanitarian crises, with Afghanistan competing for shrinking international aid budgets against multiple simultaneous emergencies worldwide.

What Happens Next

Humanitarian organisations are calling for urgent replenishment of the 2026 Response Plan to avert further deterioration. Without a substantial increase in international contributions, aid workers warn that food distributions and healthcare services will continue to contract through the second half of the year, pushing more families into crisis-level hunger and leaving the most vulnerable without recourse.

Point of View

Collapsing women's healthcare, and one of the world's highest maternal mortality rates are not separate stories — they are a single system failure playing out in slow motion. The international community's appetite for Afghanistan has dimmed since the 2021 transition, but the humanitarian arithmetic has only worsened.
NationPress
19 Jul 2026

Frequently Asked Questions

How many people in Afghanistan face food insecurity in 2026?
The UN estimates that more than 17 million people in Afghanistan will face acute food insecurity in 2026. An even larger figure — approximately 22 million — require broader humanitarian assistance including food, healthcare, and protection services.
Why are aid agencies cutting food programmes in Afghanistan?
Aid agencies are scaling back food distributions and healthcare programmes because the UN's 2026 Humanitarian Response Plan had received less than 20% of its required funding by June 2026. The severe international funding shortfall has forced organisations to suspend or reduce even some life-saving services.
How are returning Afghan migrants affecting the crisis?
According to Human Rights Watch, more than 5 million Afghan migrants have returned from Pakistan and Iran, placing additional pressure on communities already struggling to meet basic needs. HRW researcher Fereshta Abbasi described families unable to feed their children and households relying on neighbours for basic meals.
Why are women and girls especially vulnerable in Afghanistan?
Over 10.7 million women and girls will need humanitarian assistance in 2026, according to OCHA. Restrictions on their movement, education, and employment limit access to essential services, while shortages of women health workers and gaps in obstetric care contribute to one of the world's highest maternal mortality rates — an estimated 638 deaths per 100,000 live births in 2024.
What is needed to address Afghanistan's humanitarian crisis?
Humanitarian organisations are urgently calling for replenishment of the 2026 UN Humanitarian Response Plan. Without a significant increase in international contributions, aid agencies warn that food and healthcare services will continue to contract through the remainder of the year, deepening the crisis for the most vulnerable.
Nation Press
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