INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
More than half a million people in Afghanistan were displaced due to climate disasters in 2024, the International Organization for Migration
said in a nation report published on Tuesday.&& Nearly 9 million people were impacted by climate threats in the last 12 months, with over
500,000 displaced by floods, drought, and other disasters,& & IOM said, AFP reported.&& Roughly three in five of those displaced moved
somewhere else within their province of origin&& , with the western Herat and Farah provinces amongst the hardest hit, it said.This week, 39
people were killed due to floods, hail and storms in southwestern Afghanistan, primarily in Farah, according to local
authorities.Afghanistan is among the poorest countries on the planet after years of war and is ranked the sixth most vulnerable to
environment change, which is spurring extreme weather.Drought, floods, land deterioration and decreasing agricultural efficiency are
essential threats, according to the United Nations.Flash floods last May killed hundreds and swamped swaths of agricultural land in
Afghanistan, where 80 percent of people depend upon farming to survive.&& Over 11 million people in Afghanistan are at high risk of serious
impacts from climate-induced catastrophes in the future,& & the IOM said.The UN firm approximates that && climate-sensitive livelihoods,
like subsistence farming, make up 73 percent of jobs in Afghanistan&&
It included that & 92 percent of towns have actually restricted access to emergency situation services& & and & 96 percent absence
resources for crucial measures like early warning systems and search and rescue.&& The post Over 500,000 Afghans displaced due to
environment catastrophes in 2024: IOM initially appeared on Ariana News.