
Afghanistan is facing one of the world’s worst hunger emergencies, the World Food Programme warns, with shortages and child malnutrition expected to intensify as winter approaches.
Afghanistan is facing one of the world’s most severe hunger emergencies and conditions are expected to worsen during winter, the World Food Programme (WFP) said on Tuesday.
WFP warned that hunger is spreading rapidly across the country, with malnutrition among women and children increasing sharply as temperatures drop. The agency estimates that nearly five million mothers and children are currently malnourished.
According to WFP, every 10 seconds a child in Afghanistan becomes malnourished, and many families no longer have reliable access to daily food. In Helmand province, food insecurity is so severe that parents are often forced to decide which family member will eat each day.
The crisis has been intensified by a 40% reduction in food aid funding. WFP said this cut has slashed the share of Afghans receiving food assistance from 14% of the population to just 1% since October 2025.
Emergency food assistance funded by partners, including the Asian Development Bank, Australia, Canada, the UN Emergency Response Fund, the EU’s humanitarian program, France and others, remains the only lifeline for many vulnerable households.
WFP urged the international community to restore and expand funding immediately, warning that, without rapid support, millions of Afghan women and children face life-threatening hunger in the months ahead.
Afghanistan Peace Campaign