Afghanistan: from flour to petrol, prices surge in new era of Taliban rule
- With economy now deprived of billions of dollars in foreign aid, pressure on the afghani has been relentless
- The fall in the exchange rate has seen prices for many basic foodstuffs ratchet up daily

As Kabul began a new era of Taliban rule, long queues outside banks and soaring prices in the bazaars underlined the everyday worries now facing its population after the spectacular seizure of the city two weeks ago.
For the Taliban, growing economic hardship is emerging as their biggest challenge, with a sinking currency and rising inflation adding misery to a country where more than a third of the population lives on less than US$2 a day.
Even for the relatively well-off, with many offices and shops still shut and salaries unpaid for weeks, the daily struggle to put food on the table has become an overwhelming preoccupation.
“Everything is expensive now, prices are going up every day,” said Kabul resident Zelgai, who said tomatoes which cost 50 afghani the day before were now selling for 80.
In an effort to get the economy moving again, banks which closed as soon as the Taliban took Kabul have been ordered to reopen. But strict weekly limits on cash withdrawals have been imposed and many people still faced hours of queuing to get at their cash.