Kabul: In the middle of the US island from Afghanistan, people from countries grateful to witness chaos, poverty and hunger after the Taliban seized power.
Immediately after Afghan President Ashraf Ghani fled on August 15, who allowed the Taliban militia in the mountains to seize control of the country 38 million, Washington freezed more than USD 9 billion reserves to the country’s central bank, wrote Hollie McKay on Dallas’s morning news.
It was a US taxpayer that sustained a sick Afghan economy for almost two decades.
The World Bank and the International Monetary Fund suspend loans, and the financial actions unit, a Paris-based group that monitors global terror, mandates its member countries to cut Taliban money.
With every day passing, the crisis only deepens, McKay said.
Thus while one war technically ended after we were withdrawal from Afghanistan, it felt as if the others had just begun.
This may be a shortage of bombs and bullets in the past, but Afghanistan remains a bleeding place.
And always civilians suffer.
Food costs and important items are increasing on the day, being exacerbated by rapid inflation.
The value of the national currency, Afghani, then fell, and there was a shortage of cash graves.
Afghanistan who are besieged waiting more than three days in blistering heat outside the bank without food or water as the tread of the wave of the wave of stick to keep people sequentially.
Given the lack of physical money, every family can only withdraw itself which is equivalent to USD 200 per week, reporting in the morning news Dallas.
Some people who have held government or military work have not paid their salaries in a few months, including the last month of the previous government, McKay reported.
The United Nations has warned that 97 percent of Afghan residents can plunge below the poverty line in the coming weeks, a dramatic increase from 72 percent is tabulated right before the Taliban Triumph.
Unfortunately, Afghans have become a persistent victim of cold statistics.
Behind the figures were the face of father, mother, son and daughter.
Each of them has a war story, even though almost all of them never chose to go at war, add McKay.
“We are a lucky Afghanistan,” said a driver while sighing.
“But look at this beautiful place.
We will be the luckiest person if the war really stops.” Many public services, including those in the health sector, have stopped.
Women’s education has been stopped, with Taliban officials claiming to me that they do not have financial resources to ensure gender full segregation, in accordance with their strict interpretation of Islamic values, reporting Dallas Morning news.
In addition, work is difficult to do in almost all sectors.
There are no hard figures, but almost everyone you meet is begging to go or beg to find a job.
Millions of people who, just a few weeks ago, have a government position mostly unemployed.
And those in the private sector, from doctors and lawyers to artists, journalists, and entrepreneurs, have also been driven to a scary new world of unknown.
Afghanist left to take pieces of their unexpected lives facing high-level fears, McKay said.
Within a few weeks after the storm they suddenly went to the throne, the Taliban returned the ministry to propagate the virtue and prevention of representatives, which were dissolved in the US invasion.
It makes fear in the heart of Afghanistan, which maintains the memory of grimacing about cruel and cruel Islamic law practices.
“We will punish according to the rules of Islam,” Mohammad Yousuf, who believes that he is around 32 years old and who is responsible for the “center zone” Afghanistan, tells me, after gladly agreed to an interview with a woman.
“Whatever Islam guides us, we will punish accordingly.” Also, there is a commotion from the internal power game and splinter between Taliban Top Brass.
There is an undeniable feeling that Afghanistan is constantly limping, always waiting, for one war to the end and the other erupts, said McKay.