Red Cross to suspend 25 hospitals’ funding across Afghanistan

Kabul Aug 18 (Online): The International Committee of Red Cross (ICRC) spokesperson said they may end financing 25 Afghan hospitals due to shortage of funding and growing concerns over a plunge in aid to Afghanistan.

Further spokesperson Diogo Alcantara said “although we continue to engage with government ministries, donors, and organisations to find alternative sustainable support mechanisms for the hospital sector, the phase-out of the Hospital Programme is expected to happen tentatively at the end of August.”

“The ICRC does not have the mandate nor the resources to maintain a fully functioning public health-care sector in the longer term,” Alcantara said.
In April, ICRC said its governing board approved 430 million Swiss francs ($475.30m) in cost reductions over 2023 and early 2024 and a rolling back of operations in some locations as budgets for humanitarian aid were expected to decrease.

“The financial difficulties the ICRC is facing have sped up, in transparency with IEA (Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan) authorities, the expected return of the full responsibilities of the health services to the Ministry of Public Health,” Alcantara said, referring to the Taliban administration.

The programme’s end comes amid growing concerns over cuts to Afghanistan’s humanitarian aid, two years after the Taliban took over and most other forms of international assistance, which formed the backbone of the economy, were halted.

The Geneva-based organisation would continue its other Afghanistan health programmes, including rehabilitation support for people with disabilities.
A spokesman for the Taliban-run Afghan health ministry did not respond to request for comment.

It was not clear how much was needed to pay for the operations, which fund salaries and other costs at many of Afghanistan’s major hospitals serving millions of people, and if Taliban authorities could cover that amount from the fiscal budget.

An Afghan finance ministry spokesman said this year’s budget had been finalised, but not publicly released. The hospitals have been supported by ICRC since a few months after foreign forces left in August 2021.

Development funding was cut to Afghanistan as the Taliban — which has not formally been recognised by any country — took over the country. The sudden financial shock imperilled critical public services including health and education.

The ICRC and other agencies including the UN stepped in to try to fill gaps.
“The (ICRC) took this decision back then to save the healthcare system from collapsing due to the financial crises that Afghanistan was experiencing and because many development agencies and other organisations left the country while the ICRC stayed,” Alcantara said.

The ICRC hospital programme had originally covered 33 hospitals, eight of which have already been phased out, paying for the salaries of over 10,000 health workers and some medical supplies.

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