More than 10% of Afghans could lose healthcare by year-end: WHO

By AFP
April 16, 2025
Afghan refugees wait to register at the UNHCR repatriation centre on the outskirts of Peshawar. — AFP/File
Afghan refugees wait to register at the UNHCR repatriation centre on the outskirts of Peshawar. — AFP/File

KABUL: More than 10 percent of the Afghan population could be deprived of healthcare by the end of the year due to the termination of US aid, the World Health Organisation warned on Tuesday.

Afghanistan, with a population of 45 million that has long been dependent on aid, faces the world´s second-largest humanitarian crisis.

Since US funding cuts earlier this year, about three million people have lost access to health services because of the closure of more than 364 medical centres, with a further 220 centres at risk of closing by the third quarter of 2025, the UN´s health agency said. That would mean more than half of the 1,068 centres across the country would be closed, Edwin Ceniza Salvador, the WHO representative in Afghanistan, told AFP in an interview. “That´s maybe another two or three million people who have no access to healthcare services,” Salvador said in Kabul.