Poverty stalks picturesque Bamiyan province in Afghanistan-Xinhua

Poverty stalks picturesque Bamiyan province in Afghanistan

Source: Xinhua

Editor: huaxia

2022-03-29 10:02:17

Photo taken on March 19, 2022 shows cave dwellers in Bamiyan province, Afghanistan. (Photo by Saifurahmad Safi/Xinhua)

"I am in the fifth grade of school but the poverty has forced me to abandon school and work on the streets to earn bread for my family," said 14-year-old Mahdi. With a daily income of 100 afghanis (about 1 U.S. dollar), he said it is difficult to feed his 10-member family.

BAMIYAN, Afghanistan, March 29 (Xinhua) -- Once a popular destination for tourists, the picturesque Bamiyan province in Afghanistan's central region enjoys peaceful environment, but suffers from poverty as elders and teenagers are working to earn their living.

"I am a daily wager but can't find work every day. If (I) work one day, the second day will be jobless because of the poor economy and the worst economy has drastically reduced job opportunities," said 60-year-old Habibullah.

"I can hardly earn 150 - 200 afghani (about 2 U.S. dollars) per working day, while the price hike has sandwiched the poor people," he said.

Bamiyan, like other parts of Afghanistan, has been suffering from poverty since the withdrawal of the U.S.-led forces in August, 2021.

Photo taken on March 19, 2022 shows young cave dwellers in Bamiyan province, Afghanistan. (Photo by Saifurahmad Safi/Xinhua)

Following the military defeat in Afghanistan, Washington has frozen nearly 10 billion dollars in assets of Afghanistan's central bank, leading to worsening economic problems and poverty in the war-torn country.

U.S. President Joe Biden has reportedly split 7 billion dollars of frozen Afghan assets equally between the families of victims of 9/11 and the humanitarian assistance for Afghans, a decision that has been widely condemned.

More than 22 million Afghans out of some 35 million of the country's population are facing acute food shortages and the war-torn country would face humanitarian catastrophe if not assisted, according to aid agencies' reports.

"Foreigners who came to Bamiyan during the U.S.-led forces presence in Afghanistan took their money back with their returns to their homelands and that is why food prices have gone up in the market and poor people have no money to buy food," Habibullah said.

People are seen in a cave in which they live in Bamiyan province, Afghanistan, March 19, 2022. (Photo by Saifurahman Safi/Xinhua)

"I am in the fifth grade of school but the poverty has forced me to abandon school and work on the streets to earn bread for my family," said 14-year-old Mahdi. With a daily income of 100 afghanis (about 1 dollar), he said it is difficult to feed his 10-member family.

The central Bamiyan province, with its beautiful landscape and historical monuments including giant Buddhas, is among the poorest provinces of Afghanistan as cave dwellers still exist there, although it has reported no security incident over the past year.

"You can visit the mountains and valleys in all parts of Bamiyan without worrying about security," Governor of Bamiyan province Abdullah Sarhadi said, calling for foreign help in building infrastructures and economic development.

Security alone is not enough, said another Bamiyan inhabitant Najibullah, 25, adding that local people need a stable economy.

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