As heavy rains poured down on his village in eastern Afghanistan at around 11am Monday, Meya, a 57-year-old farmer, gathered his wife and daughters and rushed from their small home toward the safety of the mountains. Looking back, he saw a thunderous wave of water tearing through the village – and his wife being swept away in the storm.
“At that moment I completely lost control,” said Meya, who goes by one name.
Days later, as he and his neighbours salvaged what they could from the wreckage, Meya stared at his destroyed village in dismay. His wife had drowned. His house was destroyed. His two cows and three goats were killed. His jewellery and all of his cash – about $400 – were washed away in the flood.
Over the past week, flash floods across eastern, central and southern Afghanistan have killed at least 43 people and injured 106 more, according to Mohammad Nasim Haqqani, a spokesman for Afghanistan’s Ministry of Disaster Management.
The floods’ toll, local officials say, is likely to rise as more bodies are discovered. About 790 homes have been damaged or destroyed in the flooding, which has affected nearly 4,000 families, according to the United Nations Office for the Co-ordination of Humanitarian Affairs.
The flooding offered the latest blow to Afghanistan, which has been seized by an economic collapse and a spate of natural disasters and deadly terrorist attacks in recent months.
Around half the country’s 39 million people are facing life-threatening food insecurity, according to the United Nations. An earthquake in June in eastern Afghanistan killed about 1,000 people and destroyed the homes of thousands more. The latest terrorist attack – on a mosque in the capital, Kabul, on Wednesday – killed at least 21 people and wounded 33 others, officials said.
The back-to-back crises have tested the Taliban’s ability to provide security and badly needed emergency assistance, as their government slides further into pariah state status. The Taliban’s decision to close girls’ secondary schools indefinitely in March, and the public revelation this month that the Taliban had been sheltering al-Qaeda’s leader in Kabul, have increasingly alienated the country from Western donors despite the worsening humanitarian crisis.
For millions of Afghans, the recent devastation has also underscored how even after the end of 20 years of war, a respite that many had hoped for remains out of reach.
On Wednesday morning, dozens of families gathered in Tai Qamari village, in the eastern province of Parwan, to salvage what they could from the flooding wreckage. Dozens of cattle – crucial assets for farmers here – had been washed away in the flood, along with the two bridges connecting the village to surrounding towns.
The wells that provided water to residents were filled with mud. In the courtyard of one destroyed home, apricots and berries – once a family’s garden – stuck out from the muddied earth. One woman in a blue headscarf had just returned from a neighbouring village where she had gone to borrow some clothes for her children. Looking at the wreckage, she began to cry.
“My nerves are broken. My whole being is destroyed,” said the woman, who declined to provide her name.
At a mosque nearby, Hashmatullah Ghanizada (24) gathered with dozens of others from the village to mourn the dead. Moments before floods swept through his village on Monday morning, Ghanizada had been unloading bricks from his truck – part of a project to expand his small home – when it began to rain heavily. Soon he heard the sound of a flash flood tearing into the valley.
He joined dozens of families that scurried up a nearby mountain for safety, he said. Once the floodwater subsided, he and many of his neighbours returned to the village to collect whatever belongings – important documents, money, gold – they could.
That’s when another flash flood struck.
“I saw two people disappearing in the flood. One was a woman and the other was a boy,” Ghanizada said. “We could not have done anything else to save them. Within seconds they were gone.”
For many, the floods swept away not only their loved ones and life savings but also their livelihoods. Across the districts affected by the floods in Parwan province, hundreds of acres of orchards once packed with apricots, grapes, almonds, apples, pomegranates and peaches were destroyed by the fast flow of water, mud and stone.
Ahmad Gul (50) made a living by harvesting almonds from the 120 trees he kept on his six acres of land near the village – nearly all of which were destroyed in the flood. Bending over to dig one of the trees out of a pit of mud, a last-ditch attempt to salvage what he could, he was unsure how he would ever rebuild his meagre livelihood.
“I have nothing left – no bread to eat, no clothes to wear and no place to stay,” he said.
The Taliban carried out a search-and-rescue operation on Tuesday, and aid organisations had begun to deliver food aid and makeshift shelters to the affected areas. But many of those affected said the assistance was not enough and called on the Taliban government to do more to help them rebuild their livelihoods. “Our problems cannot be solved with a blanket and a tent,” said Hajji Hayatulllah (66).
A 30-minute drive away in Khah Sanguk village, dozens of homes were surrounded by a lake of mud more than 2m deep. The mud seemed to consume everything: homes, stFlash floods in east, centre and south have killed at least 43 people and injured 106 over the past weekorage sheds and cars.
As news of possible additional flooding in the coming days spread, most residents were preparing to evacuate the makeshift shelters they had sought refuge in after the first floods struck. They carried what they could. One woman carried a mattress. A young boy balanced a sewing machine wrapped in a red scarf on his shoulder.
Others were busy digging out their stores of firewood – a lifeline as the weather becomes colder in the coming months.
“Maybe it will take about a month to clean the entire wood store,” Gol Marjan said as he dug through the mud. But first, he would try to salvage a car he had parked near his house, he said. He needed it to leave the area before the next rains struck. – This article originally appeared in The New York Times.