Foreign aid cuts, isolation weaken Afghanistan’s earthquake response

Special An injured Afghan man receives treatment in a corn field, after earthquakes in Mazar Dara village in Noorgal district, Kunar province, eastern Afghanistan, on Sept. 1, 2025. (AFP)
An injured Afghan man receives treatment in a corn field, after earthquakes in Mazar Dara village in Noorgal district, Kunar province, eastern Afghanistan, on Sept. 1, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 08 September 2025

Foreign aid cuts, isolation weaken Afghanistan’s earthquake response

An Afghan man receives treatment in a corn field, after earthquakes in Mazar Dara village in Noorgal district, Kunar province.
  • 80 clinics in affected regions closed this year after US aid cuts, leaving 15% of population without healthcare
  • First responders reported how rescuers walked for hours, used bare hands to pull survivors from the rubble

KABUL: As rescue operations continued in eastern Afghanistan on Sunday, a week after a deadly earthquake devastated the region, World Health Organization and doctor accounts show how the withdrawal of foreign aid has undermined the country’s ability to respond to disasters.

At least 2,205 people have been killed and another 3,640 injured by the quake that hit the densely populated rural areas of Kunar and Nangarhar provinces on Aug. 31.

While the Afghan government quickly flew dozens of doctors to support overwhelmed hospitals and sent helicopters to reach the wounded, many mountain villages were cut off by landslides. First responders reported how poorly equipped rescuers had to walk for hours to reach the affected areas and often used basic tools and even their bare hands to pull survivors from the rubble.

The WHO, whose teams are also on the ground, said in its situation report on Saturday evening that timely emergency response and access to higher-level care for critical cases was limited by “severe shortages” of functioning vehicles, fuel and sustained health services.

“Afghanistan’s fragile health system — already strained by prolonged humanitarian crises and widespread poverty — faces chronic shortages of medicines and staff,” the WHO said, citing a gap of $4 million only for its own life-saving interventions, amid a widespread shortage of funding among all UN agencies and other aid groups operating in the country.

Cuts in international aid for Afghanistan followed the collapse of its Western-backed regime to the Taliban in 2021. When US-led troops subsequently withdrew from the country, international donors also froze all projects overnight, after spending billions on two decades of military and development operations.

This also disrupted the state health program, which previously funded about 75 percent of Afghan health services, leading to facility closures and staffing disruptions.

After a brief infusion of humanitarian support, funding cuts resumed by late 2022 and into 2023 — resulting in more closure of health facilities, particularly those run by nongovernmental organizations.

The US government’s decision in February to further cut funding to Afghanistan has since led to the closure of 422 health facilities across the country.

At least 80 clinics were suspended or closed in four provinces of the eastern region — Nangarhar, Kunar, Laghman and Nuristan — that were hit by the earthquake last week, leaving 15 percent of their 4 million population without critical care.

“Several villages still have no access to medical teams,” a doctor assisting the injured in Kunar province told Arab News on Sunday, as rescuers were still looking for survivors.

“In some remote villages, people remain trapped under the rubble, and the number of casualties continues to rise daily … There is an urgent need for mobile health teams equipped with essential medicines and trained medical personnel.”

Afghan doctors have been warning for months that foreign funding cuts were depriving the country’s most vulnerable of healthcare, especially in rural areas, where aid-dependent NGOs are the sole providers.

“Afghanistan’s public health system has long relied on international funding … Although the current administration has made efforts to keep the system afloat, these measures have fallen short,” said Dr. Ahmad Obaid Mujadidi, clinical consultant and CEO of Rifah Hospital in Kabul.

Less than 3 percent of Afghanistan’s annual health spending comes from the national budget, while nearly 78 percent is paid out of pocket by citizens.

Due to the lack of medical facilities in the quake-affected areas, many of the wounded were taken to the nearest hospital in Jalalabad, some 120 km from the worst-hit Noorgal district in Kunar.

“The recent earthquake has placed enormous strain on an already fragile and underfunded health system. Critical health infrastructure in the affected areas sustained damage, while major hospitals such as Nangarhar Regional Hospital — receiving a high influx of injured patients — have seen their routine services severely disrupted,” Mujadidi said.

“Without coordinated international support, post-disaster recovery will remain out of reach … Short-term health interventions spanning six to 12 months are urgently needed, particularly those targeting maternal and child healthcare, as well as the prevention of communicable diseases. However, the crisis extends beyond immediate relief. Long-term, sustainable investment is essential.”


Medieval tower collapse adds to Italy’s workplace toll

Updated 3 sec ago

Medieval tower collapse adds to Italy’s workplace toll

Medieval tower collapse adds to Italy’s workplace toll
ROME: The deadly collapse of a medieval tower in Rome has made global headlines, but for trade unions, it is simply the latest of many workplace tragedies in Italy.
“Today is a day of pain and anger,” said Natale Di Cola, secretary general of the CGIL union in Rome, which organized a torchlight procession Tuesday for the worker killed in Monday’s partial collapse of the Torre dei Conti.
A 66-year-old Romanian man, Octav Stroici, died in hospital after being trapped for hours under the rubble of the building, which was being renovated as part of a public project using European Union funds.
An investigation is underway into what happened on the site, in a busy area near the Colosseum, but one of his fellow workers told AFP that the site was “not safe.”
In a statement, the CGIL warned it was “a tragedy that requires decisive action from institutions and the corporate world.”
Some 575 people have died in workplace accidents in Italy so far in 2025, according to Inail, a public body that manages insurance for such incidents.
Construction and manufacturing were the main sectors affected.
The incident rate is only slightly above the EU average, but the tragedies regularly make the news, appearing from the outside to be the result of mundane mistakes.
The number of workplace deaths “is unacceptable,” Pierpaolo Bombardieri, general secretary of the UIL union, told AFP in a recent interview.
On the same day as the Rome tower collapse, four other people died in workplace accidents, according to the CGIL.
These included a 31-year-old who fell while working in a quarry in the Brescia area, and a construction worker, 63, who died nearly two months after an accident near Naples, the union said.

- Government changes -

Last week, Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s hard-right government published a new law on workplace safety, after months of talks with trade unions.
The decree introduces a nationwide electronic badge for companies working on construction sites, including subcontractors, boosts inspections and offers financial incentives for firms that reduce accidents.
The UIL union gave it a “positive assessment” but warned this week that “there is still much to be done.”
Francesca Re David, confederal secretary of the CGIL union, described the measures as “extremely limited,” saying they “do not adequately address the real emergencies.”

- ‘World collapsed’ -

Antonino Ferrara cannot remember his accident, just that he suddenly found his right arm crushed in an aluminum melting press, the artificial fibers in his fleece burning.
“My world collapsed at that moment,” the 29-year-old told AFP, recalling the incident at a factory in northern Italy in 2022.
He said he had not received any training, nor was he wearing the right protective clothing at the time.
“I had the interview, they showed me the machinery, and they said, ‘See you tomorrow’,” he added.
He believes he may have made a mistake, but said an investigation later found there was no safety system in place.
Fabrizio Potetti, regional secretary of CGIL in the region of Lazio, said the biggest issue in workplace safety was the lack of standards among subcontractors.
“If we look at large companies, their accident rate is close to zero, but in the chain of contracts and subcontracts, especially among small and medium-sized firms, that’s where accidents happen,” he told AFP.
Subcontracting companies, Potetti said, “save on labor costs, on safety, on training.”
The UIL union has also pointed to continued issues in subcontracting, and this week said more could be done on improving the quality of training and tackling undeclared work.
“We cannot stop. The lives of workers must be respected and protected, to achieve the only tolerable number — zero,” said UIL confederal secretary Ivana Veronese.