The Indian government is dispatching 20,000 metric tonne of wheat via Iran's Chabahar Port to Afghanistan
Acute food insecurity affecting two-thirds of Afghanistan’s population has caused India to respond with aid, despite it not recognising the Taliban government. Earlier this year, at a security conference about Afghanistan in Moscow, NSA chief Ajit Doval had made it clear that India will not abandon the Afghans in their time of need. According to World Food Programme, nine out of 10 Afghan families can not afford enough food at present and at least 20 million Afghans were facing the threat of starvation.
Responding with humanitarian aid to Afghan’s food crisis, India’s first tranche of 2,500 metric tonnes of wheat sent through Iran’s Chabahar port is expected to arrive in Herat, Afghanistan this week.
A file photo of supply trucks carrying aid shipments containing wheat to Afghanistan, move in a convoy near Lahore, Pakistan. India had already sent 40,000 MT of wheat to Taliban-ruled Afghanistan through a land border with Pakistan after Islamabad agreed in a landmark decision. Pak doesn’t otherwise allow outbound trade from India through its territory.
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