Afghanistan

Families at the Mar Garh camp, Afghanistan, received vital assistance from CAFOD and Islamic Relief [Marsha Pereira]
Families at the Mar Garh camp, Afghanistan, received vital assistance from CAFOD and Islamic Relief [Marsha Pereira]

There are only two countries in the world with lower poverty indices than Afghanistan - the number of people with access to safe drinking water source is one of the lowest in the world (23%)

Just 12% of the population has access to adequate sanitation and average life expectancy is 46 years - more than 15 years lower than in neighbouring countries.

One child in four does not survive beyond its fifth birthday.

CAFOD spent £138,000 in Afghanistan in 2008

Afghanistan's economy has recovered greatly since the fall of the Taliban in 2001, but the country still faces numerous problems - such as a devastated economy, the return of millions of refugees, continued warlordism, drug trafficking, and a new government struggling with different political forces.


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Registering for free distribution of wheat with Islamic Relief, Afghanistan 2002.

Key challenges

Afghan officials estimate the urban population will double to about 13 million by 2015. The influx of returning refugees is increasing pressure on devastated infrastructures

[REUTERS/Omar Sobhani, courtesy www.alertnet.org]

Women working for themselves

CRS Afghanistan works to improve women’s livelihoods by giving grants to women-managed businesses and enterprises

Afghan children sitting on a truck. Thousands of children are either begging or working in the streets [REUTERS/Ali Imam, courtesy www.alertnet.org]

Schooling sacrificed to poverty

The Mayhan Foundation aims to give orphans, working children and other poor children in Afghanistan the opportunity to have an education

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CAFOD supported communities with seeds, tools and training to help local people move home and reintegrate in Northern Uganda [CAFOD]

CAFOD film about Uganda to star in UN festival

Our documentary about war-torn Northern Uganda will mark the 60th anniversary of the Universal Declaration on Human Rights at the “We the Peoples” film festival

Schoolgirls in the southern Indian city of Chennai form a human chain to protest against the ongoing conflict in Sri Lanka, October 24, 2008 [REUTERS/Babu (INDIA), courtesy www.alertnet.org]

The forgotten war of Sri Lanka

CAFOD's Mary Lucas highlights the cause of the growing numbers of civilians caught in the crossfire of northern Sri Lanka’s escalating conflict

Families at the Mar Garh camp, Afghanistan, received vital assistance from CAFOD and Islamic Relief [Marsha Pereira]

Meeting women's basic needs

Two years after Taliban rule ended in Afghanistan, thousands of refugees - most of them women and children - returned to the war-ravaged country

Published on 30/07/2003, last updated on 18/08/2008
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