In the report, SIGAR said that in Afghanistan the health sector faces a lack of budget and expert staff.
The SIGAR report also expressed concern about the lack of facilities and budget in the health system and the loss of twenty years of achievements in Afghanistan.
“The Department of State and USAID have restarted reconstruction programs that were active prior to August 2021 and provided new funding for other programs focusing on poverty, hunger, malnutrition, economic stress, health care, agriculture, and education,” SIGAR said.
“The restored reconstruction programs are an important step for trust-building and can help to reduce poverty and help in the health and agriculture sectors, and we welcomed it,” Said Abdul Latif Nazari, deputy Minister of Economy.
In the report, SIGAR said that in Afghanistan the health sector faces a lack of budget and expert staff.
“In the immediate aftermath of the Taliban’s takeover, the health care sector faced an urgent funding lapse when international support and government funding for Afghanistan’s health sector was immediately halted. The World Bank halted funding for its Sehatmandi program, pushing the health care system to the brink of collapse,” said SIGAR.
Earlier, the deputy minister of the Public Ministry said that more than one billion dollars was promised for the health sector, but the Ministry of Public Health is not involved in how it is spent.