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Section
The ICRC in Afghanistan
©ICRC/Mayar/af-e-01276
Herat. The Afghan Red Crescent Society distributing relief items to vulnerable people.
The armed conflict in Afghanistan is intensifying and affecting more areas of the country. Regular fighting between armed groups and national and international forces take place regularly in more than half of Afghanistan's territory. Also in provinces not thus affected by open armed confrontations, roadside bombs and suicide bombings occur on a regular basis. While the south and the south-east remain the most conflict-affected region, the eastern provinces have also seen deterioration in the security situation.

The ICRC continues to respond to the needs of people affected by the armed conflict, though security constraints still hamper humanitarian operations in many areas.

Nevertheless, the ICRC continues to provide support for selected hospitals and for six physical rehabilitation centres largely devoted to helping landmine victims. The institution also runs programmes to highlight the dangers posed by unexploded ordnance and rehabilitates water and sanitation services.

Visits to people detained by Afghan authorities, the International Security and Assistance Force (ISAF) or the United States-led coalition remain a top priority, along with efforts to restore or maintain links between members of families separated by years of armed conflict. The teaching and promotion of International Humanitarian Law among weapon bearers and the strengthening of the Afghan Red Crescent Society are other priorities.

Presence (2009): 1,377 staff, including 115 expatriates

 
Key document
    11-3-2010
    Afghanistan: a long journey for Osman
    A land-mine cost Osman his legs and his brand-new job as a policeman. Going back to the old job was no option – herding sheep and cultivating crops from a wheelchair was hardly realistic. A chance meeting with an ICRC team changed everything. Today, Osman is walking again, on artificial legs from the ICRC rehabilitation centre in Herat.
    (The ICRC worldwide\Asia and the Pacific\Afghanistan)
    Feature Includes Photo

    9-2-2010
    ICRC survey on the impact of armed conflict on civilians: views from Afghanistan
    To raise awareness of the impact of armed conflict or other situations of armed violence on civilians, in 2009 the ICRC conducted a vast research programme in eight of the most troubled countries in the world. This report presents the consolidated results of the survey in Afghanistan.
    (The ICRC worldwide\Asia and the Pacific\Afghanistan)
    Report Includes PDF

    13-1-2010
    Afghanistan: war-hit civilians face drought risk
    Military operations and bomb attacks continued to kill and injure large numbers of civilians in Afghanistan. The ICRC continued to help health facilities deal with the consequences, providing medicines and helping the wounded rebuild their lives. Efforts to help detainees received a boost when the ICRC visited people in Taliban custody for the first time since 2001.
    (The ICRC worldwide\Asia and the Pacific\Afghanistan)
    Operational update

    6-11-2009
    Afghanistan: ICRC maintains neutral, independent, humanitarian assistance
    Despite a recent attack on a guest house in Kabul housing United Nations personnel, the ICRC is continuing its efforts to help Afghans affected by the armed conflict. The organization’s neutrality and independence, intensive dialogue with all sides and the trust of ordinary Afghans are enabling the ICRC to provide aid where it is most needed. Reto Stocker is the ICRC’s head of delegation in Afghanistan. He explains how the ICRC continues to work in this challenging context.
    (The ICRC worldwide\Asia and the Pacific\Afghanistan)
    Interview

    26-10-2009
    Persons detained by the US in relation to armed conflict and the fight against terrorism – the role of the ICRC
    This document explains the purpose of the ICRC's visits to places of detention run by the United States in Afghanistan, Iraq and Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and the procedures that the organization follows.
    (The ICRC worldwide\The Americas\United States)
    Operational update

Feature
    26-11-2009
    Afghanistan: mine victims want jobs, not pity - Najmuddin’s story
    Born in 1966 in Panjshir, Afghanistan, Najmuddin was educated in Panjshir and Kabul. At 18, he lost his legs to a landmine. For the following five years he struggled to find a job, without success, leaving him confined to his home. In 1988, he obtained artificial legs – and a job – from the rehabilitation centre of the ICRC in Kabul. He trained as a physiotherapist and in 1995 became director of the rehabilitation centre. Together with the ICRC, he is promoting the social reintegration of the people with disabilities in Afghanistan.
    (The ICRC worldwide\Asia and the Pacific\Afghanistan)
    Feature Includes Photo

    28-9-2009
    Afghanistan: in a quiet corner, the laundry ladies of Mirwais hospital go about their work
    It would be easy to overlook the contribution of the women in the laundry room and tailoring workshop to the running of southern Afghanistan’s largest hospital in Kandahar. Yet without them, it would grind to a halt. The ICRC's Jessica Barry talks about their trials, strength and courage.
    (The ICRC worldwide\Asia and the Pacific\Afghanistan)
    Feature Includes Photo

    4-9-2009
    Afghanistan: polluted water triggers health alert in Kandahar province
    When several members of one family in the Kajur area of Kandahar province died recently, and over 100 others in the same village fell sick with watery diarrhoea, alarm bells started ringing. On 22 August alone, nearly 40 patients were taken to Mirwais hospital in Kandahar for treatment.
    (The ICRC worldwide\Asia and the Pacific\Afghanistan)
    Feature

    24-8-2009
    Storytellers bring a touch of magic to health promotion in Afghanistan
    Ensuring that families know about simple basic health care is an important part of the ICRC's water and habitat programme in Afghanistan. Jessica Barry joined a team of hygiene promoters on their daily round.
    (The ICRC worldwide\Asia and the Pacific\Afghanistan)
    Feature Includes Photo

    18-8-2009
    Mirwais hospital: ICRC staff manage to work in dire circumstances
    Journalist Nima Elbagir and cameraman Jake Simkin visited the ICRC-supported Mirwais hospital in Kandahar, Afghanistan. Here, they share their impressions of the humanitarian situation and of the ICRC and its work in the hospital.
    (The ICRC worldwide\Asia and the Pacific\Afghanistan)
    Feature Includes Photo

    22-7-2009
    Afghanistan: a village in Bamiyan province vows to get clean water
    Life is tough for people living in rural Afghanistan, including those in the beautiful but remote province of Bamiyan. The ICRC's Habibullah Hussaini met villagers who are determined to make a difference in their lives by improving their access to clean drinking water.
    (The ICRC worldwide\Asia and the Pacific\Afghanistan)
    Feature Includes Photo

    22-5-2009
    Afghanistan: time out in Kabul
    When the sadness of life that is so often manifest on Kabul’s dusty streets becomes overwhelming, there is no better place to go than the ICRC Orthopaedic Centre in Ali Abad on the city's outskirts, as ICRC communication coordinator Jessica Barry found out.
    (The ICRC worldwide\Asia and the Pacific\Afghanistan)
    Feature Includes Photo

    15-5-2009
    Afghanistan: portraits of the blind
    Dad-e-Khuda, Zalmai and Jamaluddin are all blind and live in the Afghan Red Crescent Society’s Marastoon in Kabul. Here they find the support they need to cope with life, and have the opportunity to learn new skills that give hope for a better future.
    (The ICRC worldwide\Asia and the Pacific\Afghanistan)
    Feature Includes Photo

    8-5-2009
    Afghanistan: in Kabul, a house for the destitute becomes a place of hope for the mentally ill
    There are very few places in Afghanistan where the mentally sick can find care. ICRC communication coordinator, Jessica Barry, together with a colleague, visited one of them.
    (The ICRC worldwide\Asia and the Pacific\Afghanistan)
    Feature Includes Photo

    8-4-2009
    Afghanistan: assistance to the war-wounded
    In 1979, following the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, the ICRC started providing medical and surgical assistance in Pakistan to Afghans wounded in the fighting. Based in Kabul since 1987, the ICRC has consistently sought to provide neutral, independent support to health structures and staff across Afghanistan, and to care for conflict victims.
    (The ICRC worldwide\Asia and the Pacific\Afghanistan)
    Feature Includes Photo

    23-1-2009
    Afghanistan: Sandali stoves, a blessing and a curse
    In Afghanistan the Sandali stove is a popular, cheap heating method. But its use is also fraught with danger, such as asphyxiation or accidental burning. The ICRC’s Jessica Barry explains.
    (The ICRC worldwide\Asia and the Pacific\Afghanistan)
    Feature Includes Photo

    23-9-2008
    Afghanistan: family visit programme begins for Bagram detainees
    For the first time, families of people in US custody at Afghanistan’s Bagram Air Base can see their relatives in person. The ICRC’s Abdul Hassib Rahimi reports from Kabul.
    (The ICRC worldwide\Asia and the Pacific\Afghanistan)
    Feature Includes Photo

    13-5-2008
    Afghanistan: hope rising from the ashes
    Injuries from landmines over the last 25 years have left an estimated 100,000 or more Afghan people handicapped. Scattered throughout the country, landmines bring sudden and unexpected tragedy to many families. This is the story of Saddiq Ali, whose shattered life the ICRC is helping to rebuild.
    (The ICRC worldwide\Asia and the Pacific\Afghanistan)
    Feature Includes Photo

    5-11-2007
    The Cairo Chronicles : bits of life in Kabul
    Alberto Cairo is head of the ICRC's programmes for the war disabled in Afghanistan. Over the past 18 years he has met many ordinary people with extraordinary stories. Extracts from his diary.
    (ICRC Activities\Assistance\Health\Physical rehabilitation)
    Feature Includes Photo

Field newsletter
    28-12-2009
    The ICRC in Afghanistan: focus on water and habitat
    This delegation newsletter from the ICRC in Kabul focuses on the ICRC's water and habitat programme in Afghanistan including work in prisons, hospitals and orthopaedic centres, urban and rural areas and hygiene promotion activities. This special edition of the newsletter is dedicated to the memory of Engineer Abdul Wadood, a long-time and cherished member of the ICRC Wathab team, who died in August 2009 in a massive explosion in his Kandahar neighbourhood.
    (The ICRC worldwide\Asia and the Pacific\Afghanistan)
    Field newsletter Includes PDF

    8-6-2009
    The ICRC orthopaedic programme in Afghanistan
    The ICRC has been permanently present in Afghanistan since 1987, and the orthopaedic programme was one of its first activities. The first ICRC Orthopaedic Centre opened in Kabul in 1988. More than 90,000 Afghan disabled have been assisted through the Orthopaedic Programme. Today, this programme is the ICRC's largest activity in Afghanistan and the institution is more than ever committed to do its utmost to continue supporting physically disabled Afghans.
    (The ICRC worldwide\Asia and the Pacific\Afghanistan)
    Field newsletter Includes PDF

    12-5-2009
    Afghanistan: delegation newsletter on health
    Newsletter, January - March 2009
    (The ICRC worldwide\Asia and the Pacific\Afghanistan)
    Field newsletter Includes PDF

ICRC film
    26-1-2010
    Afghanistan: war zone hospital
    Mirwais Hospital in Kandahar serves over 4 million people across southern Afghanistan. As fighting in the region intensifies, the number of casualties through its doors is also rising sharply. Most of the injured are civilians, caught in roadside explosions, air strikes and gunfire. There are two to a bed in the children's ward and the operating theatre has to work 24 hours a day as doctors and nurses struggle to save lives in this war-torn country.
    (Info resources\ICRC publications and films\Films\From the field)
    ICRC film Includes Video

    7-12-2009
    Our world at war: 10 multimedia clips from 8 conflict zones
    Five award-winning war photographers from the VII photo agency – James Nachtwey, Franco Pagetti, Antonin Kratchovil, Ron Haviv and Christopher Morris - and the ICRC united to bring individual stories of loss and suffering in war to the forefront of the world’s attention: women struggling to recover from sexual violence, families coping with displacement, and people victimized by gang warfare. The project also drew attention to the inspirational efforts, by ordinary men and women, to limit human suffering in some of the most violent corners of the world. This DVD features 10 multimedia clips from eight war-affected countries.
    (Info resources\ICRC publications and films\Films\RC Movement)
    ICRC film Includes Video

    7-6-2007
    ICRC - 20 years in Afghanistan
    Through the words of those who have borne the brunt of Afghanistan's devastating conflicts, this film looks back on 20 years of uninterrupted ICRC presence in the country. Both beneficiaries and local staff describe the profound impact the ICRC's dedicated work has had on their lives and on those of their fellow countrymen from all ethnic and religious backgrounds.
    (Info resources\ICRC publications and films\Films\Assistance)
    ICRC film Includes Video

    19-9-2006
    Afghanistan: surviving the Peace
    Travelling on roads, working in the fields or even walking to school are fraught with danger in many parts of Afghanistan. After decades of war the country is littered with landmines and explosives which continue to kill and maim. Among recent victims is 15-year-old Kabir who returns to the scene of his accident to tell his story.
    (Info resources\ICRC publications and films\Films\From the field)
    ICRC film Includes Video

International Review of the Red Cross
    31-3-2007
    Interview with Ms Fatima Gailani, President of the Afghan Red Crescent Society
    Fatima Gailani has been serving as the president of the Afghan Red Crescent Society since 2004. She is the daughter of Pir Sayed Ahmed Gailani, the leader of the National Islamic Front of Afghanistan who fought against the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan in the 1980s.
    (Info resources\International Review\2007 - No. 865)
    International Review of the Red Cross Includes PDF

Interview
    25-9-2009
    Afghanistan: the human cost of war
    Patrick Hamilton, who has just finished a stint as deputy head of the ICRC’s delegation in Afghanistan, leaves the country as the conflict is spreading and intensifying. He talks about how the ICRC has been able to expand its operations over the past few years thanks to its principles of neutrality and independence.
    (The ICRC worldwide\Asia and the Pacific\Afghanistan)
    Interview Includes Photo

    30-3-2009
    Afghanistan: 30 years of suffering
    Director of Operations Pierre Krähenbühl voices the ICRC's concern about how the Afghan conflict is hitting civilians increasingly hard. Unless the warring parties do more to meet their obligations under international humanitarian law, civilians will continue to bear the brunt of the violence.
    (The ICRC worldwide\Asia and the Pacific\Afghanistan)
    Interview Includes Photo

    18-2-2008
    Humanitarian situation worsens as Afghan hostilities spread
    The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) is deeply concerned about the worsening humanitarian situation in Afghanistan. As armed hostilities spread and insecurity grows, more and more people are being forced to flee their homes. It is also becoming increasingly difficult for the ICRC to access displaced people throughout the country. In addition, freezing temperatures and blizzards have affected several areas, killing hundreds. Interview with Franz Rauchenstein, ICRC deputy head of delegation in Afghanistan.
    (The ICRC worldwide\Asia and the Pacific\Afghanistan)
    Interview Includes Photo

Operational update
    15-10-2009
    Afghanistan: no respite for civilians as violence continues
    Despite the Ramadan celebrations, attacks and fighting continued daily throughout September. Once again, civilians bore the brunt of the violence.
    (The ICRC worldwide\Asia and the Pacific\Afghanistan)
    Operational update

    18-9-2009
    Afghanistan: ICRC hospital treats bomb victims during election period
    The recent elections in Afghanistan brought a spate of bombings. As well as helping treat the victims, the ICRC gave support to Afghan Red Crescent health operations and first-aid volunteers. Behind the scenes, ICRC personnel were busy promoting humanitarian law, visiting prisoners, helping disabled people to rejoin society and providing safe drinking water.
    (The ICRC worldwide\Asia and the Pacific\Afghanistan)
    Operational update

    12-8-2009
    Afghanistan: caring for civilians caught up in conflict
    Afghanistan is one of the ICRC's biggest operations worldwide, with 119 delegates and 1,314 national staff based at the organization's main delegation in Kabul and in five sub-delegations and eight offices countrywide. This is an update on ICRC activities in the country in July 2009.
    (The ICRC worldwide\Asia and the Pacific\Afghanistan)
    Operational update Includes Photo

    14-7-2009
    Afghanistan: ICRC activities in June 2009
    Afghanistan is one of the ICRC's biggest operations worldwide, with 111 delegates and around 1,290 national staff based at the organization’s delegation in Kabul and in five sub-delegations and seven offices countrywide.
    (The ICRC worldwide\Asia and the Pacific\Afghanistan)
    Operational update

    10-6-2009
    Afghanistan: ICRC activities in May 2009
    Afghanistan is one of the ICRC's biggest operations worldwide, with 96 delegates and around 1,255 national staff working at the delegation in Kabul, five sub-delegations and six offices around the country.
    (The ICRC worldwide\Asia and the Pacific\Afghanistan)
    Operational update

    13-5-2009
    Afghanistan: ICRC activities in April 2009
    Afghanistan is one of the ICRC's biggest operations worldwide, with 109 delegates and around 1,270 national staff working at the organization’s delegation in Kabul and in five sub-delegations and six offices countrywide.
    (The ICRC worldwide\Asia and the Pacific\Afghanistan)
    Operational update

    16-4-2009
    Afghanistan: ICRC activities in March 2009
    Afghanistan is one of the ICRC's biggest operations worldwide, with 96 delegates and around 1,255 national staff working at the delegation in Kabul, five sub-delegations and six offices around the country.
    (The ICRC worldwide\Asia and the Pacific\Afghanistan)
    Operational update

    1-4-2009
    Afghanistan: ICRC activities in February 2009
    Afghanistan is one of the ICRC's biggest operations worldwide, with 96 delegates and around 1,255 national staff working at the delegation in Kabul, five sub-delegations and six offices around the country.
    (The ICRC worldwide\Asia and the Pacific\Afghanistan)
    Operational update

    18-2-2009
    Afghanistan: ICRC activities in January 2009
    Afghanistan is one of the ICRC's biggest operations worldwide, with 90 delegates and around 1,240 national staff based in its main delegation in Kabul and eight sub-delegations and offices countrywide.
    (The ICRC worldwide\Asia and the Pacific\Afghanistan)
    Operational update

Photo Collection
    26-11-2009
    ICRC physical rehabilitation centre in Kabul: learning to walk again
    In Afghanistan, the ICRC manages six physical rehabilitation centres and a workshop manufacturing prosthetic/orthotic appliances, bringing assistance to mine victims and other persons with limited mobility across the country. These photos were taken at the ICRC's centre in Kabul in 2009 by renowned war photographer James Nachtwey, from the VII photo agency.
    (Info resources\Photos\Asia and the Pacific)
    Photo Collection Includes Photo

    11-11-2008
    Afghanistan: seeing families through the harsh winter
    The worst drought in a decade, soaring food prices and relentless insecurity could force thousands of Afghans from their homes this winter in search of food and work. The ICRC and Afghan Red Crescent Society are working hard to meet the needs of 280,000 people in the northern and north-western provinces.
    (Info resources\Photos\Asia and the Pacific)
    Photo Collection Includes Photo

    17-4-2008
    Afganistan: landmine survivors play football
    As the clock counts down to Euro 2008 ™, the ICRC and UEFA have teamed up to help the survivors of landmines in Afghanistan through the www.scorefortheredcross.org campaign. Recently, a group of Afghan landmine victims organized a football match outside the ICRC's orthopaedic centre in Kabul to show their support for the charitable campaign.
    (Info resources\Photos\Asia and the Pacific)
    Photo Collection Includes Photo

    7-4-2008
    Afghanistan: armed conflict continues to exact a heavy toll
    After more than twenty years of being in the country, the ICRC is still providing a range of services to those affected by armed conflict in Afghanistan. These include supporting medical facilities, providing emergency assistance materials, visiting detainees, putting families back in touch and educating children about the dangers of unexploded munitions.
    (Info resources\Photos\Asia and the Pacific)
    Photo Collection Includes Photo

    27-11-2007
    Afghanistan – Measured success after decade of Mine-Ban Convention
    Ten years ago this December, the Mine-Ban Convention, or Ottawa Convention, was adopted by most of the world’s States. This photo essay explores some of the accomplishments and remaining challenges in one of the most heavily mined countries in the world.
    (Info resources\Photos\Asia and the Pacific)
    Photo Collection Includes Photo

    4-6-2007
    Afghanistan 20 years on: endless suffering, startling resilience
    This retrospective marks the 20th anniversary of the ICRC’s permanent presence in Afghanistan. It is meant to serve as a record of the unbearable suffering inflicted upon the Afghan people by 28 years of miserable war and as a tribute to their resilience.
    (Info resources\Photos\Asia and the Pacific)
    Photo Collection Includes Photo

Press article
    29-4-2008
    Score for the Red Cross
    Football and the Red Cross Red Crescent may seem unlikely bedfellows, but recognition of shared values has helped forge a longstanding and mutually beneficial relationship. In the context of the forthcoming EURO 2008™, UEFA and the ICRC have once again joined forces to bring aid to the victims of armed conflict - Article published in the Red Cross Red Crescent Magazine, No 1, 2008.
    (Help the ICRC\Clubs and associations)
    Press article

    2-1-2008
    Afghanistan: A tragic legacy
    A crossroads for conquest and commerce in the heart of Central Asia, Afghanistan is no stranger to violence and instability. Over the years, it has seen the caravans of the Silk Road and the armies of Alexander the Great, Genghis Khan and Tamerlane pass through. More recently, since 1979, the country has been ravaged by a succession of devastating conflicts. Article published in the Red Cross Red Crescent Magazine, No 3, 2007
    (The ICRC worldwide\Asia and the Pacific\Afghanistan)
    Press article Includes Photo

Press briefing
    1-4-2009
    Afghanistan/Pakistan: put the humanitarian factor on the agenda
    Just before the conference on Afghanistan and Pakistan in The Hague, ICRC head of operations for South Asia Jacques de Maio called for humanitarian considerations to be high on the agenda.
    (The ICRC worldwide\Asia and the Pacific)
    Press briefing Includes Photo

Video Collection
    13-10-2009
    Afghanistan: sorrow beyond words - James Nachtwey's photos
    James Nachtwey, a celebrated war photographer, went to Afghanistan in 2009 for the ICRC. He witnessed the hardships of some of the country's most vulnerable people. This collection of his work gives a glimpse of the human cost of war through his eyes.
    (Info resources\Video)
    Video Collection Includes Video

    19-8-2009
    A new life for Afghanistan's amputees
    Najmuddin suffered a personal tragedy more than 20 years ago when both his legs had to be amputated above the knee because of a landmine explosion. Today, he is a director of the ICRC's rehabilitation centre in Kabul where he meets and treats the victims of mines and improvised explosive devices every day.
    (Info resources\Video)
    Video Collection Includes Video

More in this section
    9-4-2003
    Homage to a slain delegate
    Ricardo Munguia (39), ICRC water engineer, was shot dead in Afghanistan on 27 March 2003. Family, friends and colleagues paid tribute to him at a ceremony in Geneva on 2 April, during a day of mourning declared by the ICRC.
    (The ICRC worldwide\Asia and the Pacific\Afghanistan)


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13-03-2010