Hunger causing more concern than COVID-19 in wintry Afghanistan, say aid agencies
OTTAWA — As the first snowfall dusted the Afghan capital of Kabul earlier this month, Mary-Ellen McGroarty pondered the rough winter that lay ahead. COVID-19 was far from being top of mind.
Unlike much of the rest of the world where concern over the Omicron-driven fifth wave of the COVID-19 pandemic is paramount, Afghans are far more concerned about the epic starvation they now face, said McGroarty, the Afghanistan country director for the World Food Program.
“It’s snowing today in Kabul. It’s incredibly cold, it’s really miserable,” McGroarty said in a recent interview from the Afghan capital.
“Every time when I’m out and I’m talking to people, the two things are, how am I going to feed my children and how am I going to keep my children warm for the winter?”