RSS   Newsletter   Contact   Advertise with us

Uzbekistan provides 3,700 tons of humanitarian aid to Afghanistan

Reading time 1 min     Christian Fernsby ▼ | December 25, 2021
Uzbekistan has provided 3,700 tons of humanitarian aid to war torn Afghanistan to help needy people in the chilly winter.
Uzbekistan
Asia   Uzbekistan
Transported by 63 rail wagons to Afghanistan's northern city Mazar I Sharif and received by Afghan officials, the batch includes foodstuffs, fuel and winter clothes that will be distributed among destitute Afghans as the country is facing economic crisis.

Expressing gratitude to Uzbekistan, Sher Mohammad Abbas Stanikzai, deputy foreign minister of Afghanistan's caretaker government, called for further enhancing relations between Kabul and Tashkent.

Stanikzai called on Uzbekistan to help Afghanistan in rebuilding airports, building railways and providing scholarships for Afghan students.

Since the takeover of Afghanistan by the Taliban in August, which resulted in the U.S. led forces departure and slapping sanction on the new administration, Afghanistan has been facing economic crisis as more than 22 million out of the country's some 36 million population are reportedly facing acute food insecurity.

To overcome the crisis, the Afghan government has called on the international community to provide humanitarian aid, and so far, many countries including China, Saudi Arabia, Uzbekistan, Qatar, among others, have provided humanitarian aid to the country.


 

MORE INSIDE POST


 
 
 
Wind sock

U.S.: Areas of severe thunderstorms and heavy rain through the weekend

Upper-level ridging weakens from the Ohio Valley to the Southeast on Friday, resulting in a reduced area of Heat Advisories over the east.
 

NEWS

TRENDING

POLITICS

CAREERS

OP-ED

 
 

QUOTE OF THE MOMENT

Sanford I. Weill"And learn that when you do make a mistake, you'll surface that mistake so you can get it corrected, rather than trying to hide it and bury it, and it becomes a much bigger mistake, and maybe a fatal mistake."

Sanford I. Weill