
Tajudeen Oyewale said Sunday that around 2,400 health centers across Afghanistan remained operational last year with support from international donors.
In a post on X, the UNICEF representative thanked the World Bank and Asian Development Bank for supporting health services that reached more than 20 million people across Afghanistan.
Oyewale said during a recent visit to Logar Province he observed how sustained investment was helping provide life-saving healthcare to children and families.
He also warned that Afghanistan is facing one of the world’s largest returnee crises, stressing that the UN response plan urgently requires continued international funding and support.
According to UN estimates, more than two million people could return to Afghanistan between April and December 2026, increasing pressure on the country’s fragile healthcare and humanitarian systems.
UN agencies recently warned that Afghanistan remains among the countries with the highest rates of obstetric fistula, with an estimated 15,000 women and girls living with the childbirth-related condition.
Afghanistan’s health sector also continues to struggle with widespread malnutrition, maternal mortality, shortages of medicine and limited healthcare access, particularly for women and children in rural areas.
Afghanistan Peace Campaign