'West will be blamed if hell arrives in Afghanistan': IRC chief Miliband
offered a stark warning to Western states over thefuture of Afghanistan on Wednesday, warning that they will be to blame if conditions deterioratefurther.
Miliband, now CEO of the International Rescue Committee, painted a bleak picture of catastrophic suffering and deprivation in Afghanistan, quoting a
“If hell really doesarrivein Afghanistan in the next few months, it’s gonna be the West that gets the blame,” Miliband told the BBC's 'Today' programme.
The former MP said it“takes the breath away” thatthe country has been left to collapse and its people abandoned after Western countries withdrew their troops from the country, trigging a sequence of events that led to.
“There’s just no money in people’s pockets... there’s no money in the banks... inflation is rising, and the country is... going to hell, and the people are going to hell,” Miliband said.
Miliband's comments came one day after the head of the UN World Food Programme David Beasley said
“It is going to be hell on earth,” Beasley said.
Miliband described a“triple shock” crippling the Afghan economy caused by the suspension of international aid, freezing of assets and uncertainty surrounding sanctions.
He called on to provide humanitarian relief as well as prioritisefunding for public sector workers and basic services.
However, he later said there was no international solidarity or energy
“There isn’t any international energy to distribute Covid vaccines for goodness sake,” he added.
About 95 percent of people do not have enough food in Afghanistan, and 23 million people are marching towards starvation, according to the World Food Programme.
The landlocked Asian country was already facing a major humanitarian crisis before the Taliban took controlin a lightning offensive over the summer that ended in the fall of on 15 August. Nearly half the population was living below the national poverty line.
Following the Talibantakeover, Afghanistan’s foreign assets have been frozen and there has been prompting a mass exodus into neighbouring countries.
International donors who suspended aid now face the predicament of attempting to alleviate sufferingwithout legitimising the Taliban's self-appointed government and emboldening corruption and inequality.