KUNAR, Afghanistan – The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) confirmed on Wednesday that four young children displaced by recent earthquakes have frozen to death in a camp in eastern Afghanistan, underscoring a mounting humanitarian disaster as winter tightens its grip on vulnerable populations.
The victims, whose ages were not specified, died in the Zari Baba displacement camp in Kunar province’s Nurgal district. Their families, forced from their homes by a series of destructive earthquakes that struck western Afghanistan in October, are now living in flimsy, makeshift shelters with scant protection against plummeting temperatures.
In a stark statement, UNICEF’s Representative in Afghanistan, Tajudeen Oyewale, attributed the deaths directly to exposure and to illnesses exacerbated by the severe cold. “These children died from the freezing temperatures and from preventable illnesses, conditions that timely medical care, proper shelter, and basic winter support could have averted,” Oyewale said.
He issued an urgent plea for action, calling on humanitarian agencies and international partners to “immediately accelerate winter relief operations” and deliver emergency supplies to affected communities “before more lives are tragically lost.”
The agency emphasized that essential aid—including heavy blankets, fuel and heating supplies, winter clothing, and critical medical assistance—is needed desperately to protect countless other vulnerable children and families.
This tragic incident confirms earlier warnings from UNICEF that over 270,000 children in Afghanistan’s northern and eastern regions, already traumatized and displaced by the earthquakes, now face severe risk from hypothermia, respiratory infections, and other cold-related ailments as temperatures plunge below freezing.
The crisis is compounded by a dire funding shortfall and significant logistical challenges. Humanitarian organizations report that a lack of resources and difficult access to remote areas, including Kunar province, are severely hampering relief efforts. They express grave concern that without a swift and scaled-up response, many more preventable deaths will occur in the coming weeks.
The situation in Afghanistan remains one of the world’s most severe humanitarian emergencies. Decades of conflict, economic collapse, and a succession of natural disasters have left nearly two-thirds of the population—over 29 million people—in need of aid. The onset of winter each year creates a lethal convergence of cold, hunger, and disease, with displaced children being among the most vulnerable.
International aid groups are reiterating calls for donors to fulfill funding commitments for Afghanistan’s humanitarian response plan, which remains critically underfunded. The international community faces mounting pressure to ensure life-saving support reaches those on the brink before the winter claims more young victims.
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