Advertisement
‘We can’t even find dry bread’: despair, disease grip Afghanistan a year after Taliban takeover
- Cholera outbreaks, malnutrition and poverty have driven the country’s humanitarian crisis to desperate new levels since the Islamists seized power a year ago
- But some say ‘the overall situation is better’ than under the previous government, when corruption was rife
Reading Time:4 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
4

The heaving wards of a ramshackle clinic in southern Afghanistan are just one sign of the catastrophic humanitarian crisis that has gripped the war-ravaged country since the Taliban returned to power a year ago.
Last month, the Musa Qala District Hospital in Helmand province was forced to shut its doors to all except those suffering from suspected cholera.
The infirmary was soon jammed with listless patients, intravenous drips needled into their wrists as they recuperated on rusting gurneys.
Advertisement
Though the clinic lacks facilities to test for cholera, about 550 patients presented themselves within days, showing symptoms of a disease caused by a lack of basic sanitation needs: clean drinking water and an adequate sewerage system.
“It’s very difficult,” hospital chief Ehsanullah Rodi, run ragged on just five hours of sleep a night since the influx began, said.
Advertisement
“We didn’t see this from last year, or another year.”
Advertisement
Select Voice
Select Speed
1.00x