OSLO/KABUL, January 27 – The United Nations confirmed today that Norway has pledged $990,000 in humanitarian assistance to Afghanistan, channeling funds through a key UN mechanism to address one of the world’s most severe human emergencies. This contribution arrives as international agencies issue urgent warnings of escalating needs amid a dire economic collapse, natural disasters, and restrictive policies.
The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) stated the funds from Norway—approximately 10 million Norwegian kroner—will be allocated to the Afghanistan Humanitarian Fund (AHF). This country-based pooled fund is designed to allocate resources rapidly to frontline NGOs and UN agencies, allowing for a flexible and prioritized response to sudden emergencies and chronic needs.
“Norway’s sustained support is crucial,” an OCHA spokesperson said. “It enables our partners to act swiftly when crises hit—whether it’s an earthquake, a devastating flood, or a severe winter—saving lives and alleviating suffering where needs are most acute.”
A Context of Unrelenting Need
This pledge follows recent commitments from other European nations, including Sweden and Italy, underscoring a fragile continuum of international support. However, aid officials stress that donations remain insufficient against the staggering scale of the crisis.
According to the UN’s 2026 Humanitarian Response Plan, a staggering 22 million Afghans—over half the population—require humanitarian assistance this year. The country is paralyzed by a perfect storm of factors: decades of conflict, a frozen financial system, the withdrawal of major development aid, drought-like conditions, and a ban on female aid workers that severely cripples delivery capabilities, particularly for women and girls.
How the Funds Are Used
The AHF functions as a strategic financial instrument, directing resources to pre-vetted partners for:
Emergency Response: Immediate aid following natural disasters or conflict displacement.
Life-Sustaining Support: Provision of food, clean water, primary healthcare, and winterization kits.
Capacity Building: Strengthening local organizations to deliver and manage aid effectively.
Coordination: Ensuring aid reaches the most vulnerable communities, including in hard-to-access regions, with minimal duplication.
OCHA has issued a global appeal for $1.71 billion for its Afghanistan operations in 2026. The gap between needs and available funding, however, continues to threaten program closures and ration reductions.
The Stakes: A Race Against Time and Indifference
Humanitarian leaders frame the situation with acute urgency. “This is not merely a funding shortfall; it is a potential death sentence for millions,” said one aid coordinator, speaking on condition of anonymity. “The Afghan winter is brutal, and families are facing impossible choices between food, heat, and medicine. Sustained and predictable funding is the only barrier between vulnerable populations and catastrophe.”
The Norwegian contribution, while vital, highlights the pressing need for other donors to step forward. With major global crises diverting attention and resources, advocates fear Afghanistan risks becoming a ‘forgotten emergency’ even as its people endure some of the highest levels of acute food insecurity and poverty on the planet.
The international community now faces a critical test of its commitment to humanitarian principles in one of the most challenging operational landscapes in the world.
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