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‘We won’t eat tonight’: Hunger plagues Afghan valley

AFP .  Bamiyan 
06 Oct 2021 00:00:00 | Update: 06 Oct 2021 02:16:53
‘We won’t eat tonight’: Hunger plagues Afghan valley
The Taliban takeover of Afghanistan has worsened the economic hardship of the community that lives in the mountainside caves of Bamiyan– AFP Photo

They have long survived hand to mouth, but since the Taliban conquered the Bamiyan valley, rural Afghans living in its mountainside caves have been left weak from hunger and fear.

Known as one of the most beautiful regions in Afghanistan, the rugged, central valley is home to

several hundred families living in caves that were carved into sandstone cliffs by Buddhist monks in the fifth century.

The community is among the poorest in the country and the Taliban takeover in August has only exacerbated their hardship, with international aid cut off, food prices rising and unemployment spiking.

They live a few kilometres from where the valley’s famous giant, ancient Buddha statues once stood, before they were dynamited by the Islamist group when they were last in power two decades ago.

Fatima says her cave partially collapsed during heavy rains a year and a half ago, leaving the 55-year-old and three family members crammed into a tiny cavern measuring just six square metres (65 square feet).

“We won’t eat tonight. And winter is almost here. We have nothing to keep warm,” she says, her face partially covered by a black veil.

“We live in misery and misfortune.”

‘I come back with nothing’

Daily wage labourers and porters no longer bring home the little money they once did to settle rumbling stomachs.

Only the harvesting of potatoes has continued -- the single crop that can be grown in the area at an altitude of 2,500 metres (8,200 feet).

“I go to the Bamiyan bazaar every morning, but I come back with nothing,” says Mahram, a 42-year-old bricklayer.

“When there was work, I made 300 afghanis ($3.75) per day.”

Now the family is surviving by sending their children to help harvest potatoes.

“The farmers give them some instead of salaries,” Mahram says. “That is all we have, with a bit of bread.”

“But in 10 days, the harvest will be over, and we will really be hungry. People will die.”

Like most people living in the region, the families are Hazara, a mainly Shiite ethnic minority that has been marginalised and persecuted in Afghanistan for centuries.

The victory of the Taliban, made up of Sunni hardliners who see the community as heretics, has caused panic.

“It is very frightening,” says Amena, a 40-year-old mother of five children.

“But they have not come, and will probably not come all the way up to where we are.”

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