The new multi-million package of UK aid, which matches the value of last year’s commitment, will provide “life-saving food and emergency health support” to Afghan people, the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) said.
According
to report, the UK is pledging an extra £286 million of emergency aid to provide
life-sustaining food, shelter and medical supplies for people in Afghanistan.
The
announcement comes as Britain is set to co-host a United Nations (UN)
international pledging summit to help raise more than £3 billion for
humanitarian relief in the wake of the Taliban takeover.
The funds
will also support basic services such as improving access to healthcare, and
helping farmers overcome the impact of drought, it added.
Foreign
Secretary Liz Truss said: “The UK is rallying countries in support of the
Afghan people and helping lead the way in providing life-sustaining food,
shelter and medical supplies.
“Together
with allies and partners, we can do more and will do more to help Afghanistan.”
The FCDO
said the new UK funds will be channelled through UN partners and trusted
non-governmental organisations (NGOs), with none going directly to the Taliban.
FCDO
minister Lord Ahmad of Wimbledon said: “The people of Afghanistan deserve the
right not only to survive, but to thrive and live in freedom. Our humanitarian
aid supports the most vulnerable, including girls and women as well as
marginalised religious minorities.
“I’m proud
the UK is co-hosting this conference with the United Nations, Qatar and
Germany, to strengthen the international response which has already saved lives
this winter.”
The FCDO
said the UN estimates around 10 million children across Afghanistan urgently
need humanitarian assistance to survive.
Thursday’s
conference will source funds for these means, it said, as well as to protect
women and girls and support stability in the region.
The
department added that Ms Truss will “commit to putting women and girls at the
heart of the UK’s response”, stressing the Taliban must “engage constructively
to protect their rights and urgently reverse the decision to prevent girls
attending secondary school”.
The UN is
seeking to raise 4.4 billion US dollars (£3.6 billion) to help Afghans in need
of urgent aid – its biggest-ever appeal for a single country.
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