WFP / AFGHANISTAN FOOD DISTRIBUTION
STORY: WFP / AFGHANISTAN FOOD DISTRIBUTION
TRT: 01:12
SOURCE: WFP
RESTRICTIONS: PLEASE CREDIT WFP ON SCREEN
LANGUAGE: NATS
DATELINE: 23 FEBRUARY 2026, KABUL, PARWAN, AFGHANISTAN
23 FEBRUARY 2026, KABUL, AFGHANISTAN
1. Various shots, WFP trucks arriving at warehouse
2. Various shots, WFP wheat flour bag
3. Various shots, worker carrying WFP wheat flour bag to truck, worker carrying WFP yellow split peas from warehouse to truck
4. Various shots, WFP truck driver waving at the camera and driving off, WFP convoy of seven trucks leaving WFP Kabul warehouse
5. Various shots, WFP convoy on roundabout
23 FEBRUARY 2026, PARWAN, AFGHANISTAN
6. Various shots, WFP truck driving through the mountainous road of Parwan towards distribution point
7. Various shots, 3 WFP trucks parked, workers offloading and carrying food, WFP donor banner, distribution point, Surkh-e-Parsa, Parwan
8. Various shots, workers loading wheat flour onto wheelbarrow, oil being added to wheelbarrow, workers offloading iodized salt
9. Various shots, Azeez in queue, fingerprint scan
10. Various shots, Azeez handing over to collect food ration, worker carrying food, leaving distribution point walking toward his home
11. Various shots, Azeez’s daughter walking upstairs, Azeez’s wife carrying WFP food upstairs
12. Various shots, Azeez and his family sitting together in their home and praying
World Food Programme (WFP) warned of deepening crisis in Afghanistan as insecurity flares on eastern, southern and western border.
This is a summary of what was said by John Aylieff, WFP Afghanistan Representative and Country Director (speaking from Bangkok via Zoom) – to whom quoted text may be attributed – today (3 Mar) at the press briefing at the Palais des Nations in Geneva.
Afghanistan is seeing an escalation of insecurity on its borders— increased fighting on the eastern and southern frontier with Pakistan, and ongoing violence in Iran.
This renewed fighting is putting immense pressure on communities already vulnerable and worn down by years of crisis, conflict and chaos.
Afghanistan shares an approximately 2,400kilometre border with Pakistan, touching nearly one third of its provinces.
Since 26 February, violence has escalated across the Durand Line, triggering displacement of approximately 20,000 families across the Eastern, Southeastern and Southern regions.
Cross border violence and air and ground strikes have affected more than 30 districts in Nangarhar, Nuristan, Kunar, Laghman, Paktika, Paktya, Khost, Kandahar, Helmand provinces.
Across these provinces, WFP has been forced to temporarily suspend emergency, social protection, school feeding and livelihood activities.
Approximately 160,000 people have been impacted by the suspension of emergency food distributions.
You may recall the earthquake that struck eastern Afghanistan on 31 August.
Communities in mountainous Kunar and Nangarhar provinces—already among the most vulnerable—were hardest hit, losing family members, homes and livelihoods. Today, those very same communities are once again on the front line, now facing the escalation of conflict with Pakistan.
The affected districts were already facing severe food insecurity, with more than half in Emergency levels of hunger, while four of the affected provinces are experiencing critical levels of acute malnutrition – leaving families in an increasingly dire situation.
On the other side of the country, on Afghanistan’s western border, violence in Iran is sparking fears of a surge in returnees.
We witnessed a similar surge in returns during increased fighting in June 2025. For many, coming back to Afghanistan means not only facing poverty, unemployment and hunger but also renewed instability.
Saeed Azeez, a 36-year-old father of four, returned from Iran only months ago, where he lived on a modest factory wage – but able to feed his family.
Back in Afghanistan, he found himself with no home, no work and some days nothing more than bread to eat.
Injured and unable to work, and with restrictions preventing his wife from working, his family now survives on WFP rations.
As Saeed put it, during Ramadan: “We barely have any food to break our fast.” His story illustrates how returnees—already among the most vulnerable—are seeing renewed instability, poverty and hunger.
In 2025, WFP supported over half a million returnees at border points with Iran and Pakistan.
Assistance included cash, fortified biscuits and nutritious food products for women and children.
Afghanistan already saw an influx of more than 2.5 million returnees from Iran and Pakistan in 2025.
Even before the latest escalation, projections estimated a similar influx in 2026—but renewed fighting may drive those numbers even higher, placing unbearable strain on a woefully underfunded humanitarian response.
Afghanistan remains one of the world’s most severe hunger crises with one in three Afghans—17.4 million people in urgent need of food assistance.
Child malnutrition has also reached worrying levels, with 3.7 million children projected to need treatment in 2026.
With a new crisis in the making and the current funding outlook, WFP will not be able to reach families fleeing Iran and Pakistan and those internally displaced by the cross- border conflict in Afghanistan.
For our winter response this year, WFP was only able to provide food assistance to a fraction of those in need.
WFP warns that by April 2026 funding for emergency operations will run out, putting millions at risk of losing critical support.
Our funding need for the next six months stands at US$313 million.
WFP urges the international community to honor their commitment and not abandon Afghanistan in its hour of greatest need.









