Key Points

• Due to conflict, many people continue to be displaced into Kabul and other urban areas in large numbers.

• The Government and humanitarian partners have deployed more than twenty inter-agency assessment teams in Kabul to verify internally displaced people (IDPs) and assess their humanitarian needs.

• Multi-sector humanitarian assistance – in the form of food, cash, health, household items, and water and sanitation support – has been provided to some 13,500 people, while additional assistance on the way.

Situation Overview

Due to an escalation of conflict across the country, many people are arriving in Kabul and other large cities, seeking safety from the conflict and other threats. Between 1 July and 13 August 2021, the humanitarian community verified 13,500 IDPs who had arrived in Kabul. Many of these people arrived from the north, southwest and southeast, and more recently from Wardak and Ghazni provinces. IDPs are either renting or being hosted by friends, family and other kinship ties. A growing number are also staying in the open in different parts of the city.

As of 13 August, the Government completed the relocation of 8,400 IDPs from Shahr-e-Now park in PD 10 and PD 11 to Pir Mohamad Kakar High School in PD 7 and a Government building in Dehsabz district.

Humanitarian Response

Between twenty and twenty-five inter-agency assessment teams are presently deployed and are verifying IDPs and their humanitarian needs. The number of assessment teams has doubled in two days while more partners continue to join in.

People’s immediate needs are shelter, food, sanitation and drinking water and humanitarian partners are providing support. As of 13 August, humanitarian partners provided food, cash, household items, health and water and sanitation assistance to more than 6,600 people in Kabul today (13 August) alone, bringing the total number of people reached with multi-sector assistance to 13,500 IDPs.

Coordination

The Humanitarian Community is working closely with the Government and municipal authorities in Kabul to plan the response and ensure people are provided with the most dignified living conditions. The Operational Coordination Team (OCT) is meeting daily and chaired by OCHA, with the presence of Department of Refugee and Repatriation (DoRR), Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA) and humanitarian partners. From the Government’s side, a coordination cell has also been established to coordinate and monitor the distribution of assistance (food and household items from private sources – charity organisations, civil societies and individuals).

Partners are further planning to set up stations along the four main entry points into the city to enable tracking of population inflows.

UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs
To learn more about OCHA's activities, please visit https://www.unocha.org/.