An economic crisis , drought and new restrictions since the Taliban took control of Afghanistan a year ago have shattered girls’ lives, excluded them from society and left them hungry, with a quarter showing signs of depression, Save the Children says.
A report by the charity, Breaking Point: Life for children one Year since the Taliban Takeover, shows that 97 per cent of families are struggling to provide enough food for their children, and that girls are eating less than boys.
Almost 80 per cent of children said they had gone to bed hungry in the past 30 days and girls were almost twice as likely as boys to frequently sleep with empty stomachs.
Nine in 10 girls said their meals had been reduced in the past year and that they worry because they are losing weight and have no energy to study, play and work.
The lack of food is affecting girls' health and their future.
The crisis is also taking a dangerous toll on girls’ mental and psychosocial well-being, says the study.
Interviews with their caregivers indicate 26 per cent of girls are showing signs of depression compared with 16 per cent of boys, and 27 per cent of girls are showing signs of anxiety compared with 18 per cent of boys.
Virtual tours of Herat girls' education in Afghanistan - in pictures Fatima Haidari made headlines when she became Afghanistan's first female tour guide. All photos: Untamed Borders unless otherwise specified
Her success story in the country's tourism industry made her a target when the Taliban seized power. Photo: Fatima Haidari
The tour guide aged 24 is settling into a new life in Italy and now has Afghanistan on her bucket list.
She is working to help girls in Afghanistan receive an education despite Taliban rule.
Alongside Untamed Borders, she's running virtual tours that show travellers the cultural significance of Afghanistan.
Fatima Haidari wants to share her country's many sites, to help raise awareness of the plight of women in her country. Photo: Fatima Haidari
Herat boasts the best concentration of ancient buildings in Afghanistan.
The country has many ancient mosques and mausoleums for travellers to see.
The minarets of the Mussalla complex date back to when the city was under Timurid rule.
Horseback riding in Afghanistan.
The Herat Citadel dates back to 330 BC.
Bamiyan, the capital of Bamyan Province in central Afghanistan. Photo: Fatima Haidari
Girls reported having trouble sleeping at night because they were worried and had bad dreams.
They said they had been excluded from many of the activities that made them happy, such as spending time with relatives and friends and going to parks and shops.
After the Taliban’s takeover last August, thousands of secondary school girls were ordered to stay home , reversing years of progress for gender equality.
Girls interviewed for the study expressed disappointment and anger over being banned from school and said they felt hopeless about their future because they did not have the rights and freedom they used to have.
More than 45 per cent of girls said they were not attending school, compared with 20 per cent of boys.
Reasons they gave included economic challenges, the Taliban’s ban on girls attending secondary school , and community attitudes.
One year since the Taliban seized power in Afghanistan - in pictures Military leaders attend a flag-lowering ceremony in Afghanistan on June 24, 2021 as the UK’s contribution in the country draws to a close. A number of troops were to remain to offer diplomatic assurance to the international community in Kabul. Getty Images
A member of the Afghan security personnel looks distraught as he stands guard at the site of a car bomb explosion near the defence minister's home in Kabul, on August 4, 2021. AFP
Security officials inspect the scene of an attack on Dawa Khan Menapal, the head of the Afghan government's information centre, in Kabul on August 6, 2021. Taliban militants shot him dead. EPA
People are stranded at the Pakistani-Afghan border which has been closed by the Taliban, who have taken control of the Afghan side, on August 9, 2021. EPA
US special envoy for Afghanistan Zalmay Khalilzad (2nd L) arrives at a hotel in Qatar's capital Doha for a meeting on the escalating conflict in Afghanistan, on August 10, 2021. AFP
Taliban fighters driving through Herat, Afghanistan's third-biggest city, on August 13, 2021 after under-siege government forces had pulled out the previous day. AFP
Taliban militants gather in the main square after taking control of Kandahar, Afghanistan, on August 13, 2021. The fall of Kandahar came hours after the Taliban had captured Herat. EPA
Afghanistan's president Ashraf Ghani and acting defence minister Bismillah Khan Mohammadi visit military corps in Kabul on August 14, 2021. Reuters
Internally displaced families from northern provinces, who fled from their homes due to the fighting between Taliban and Afghan security forces, take shelter in a public park in Kabul, Afghanistan, on August 14, 2021. EPA
People at the border checkpoint at Chaman, Pakistan on August 15, 2021. Pakistani authorities had reopened the frontier with Afghanistan on August 13 after several days of closure. EPA
Afghan police on duty on August 15, 2021 after the Taliban had taken over Kandahar. The militants have by this stage reached the outskirts of Kabul, the capital of Afghanistan. EPA
Ahmadullah Muttaqi, the Taliban's director for information and culture, talks to journalists after the government in Kandahar had surrendered to the militants. EPA
Taliban fighters and local people sit on an Afghan National Army armoured vehicle on a street in Jalalabad province on August 15, 2021. AFP
Afghan families flee Kabul on August 15, 2021. The Taliban said they do not intend to enter Kabul 'by force or war, but to negotiate with the other side to enter peacefully". Getty Images
Tens of thousands of people attempt to flee Afghanistan to escape the hardline rule expected under the Taliban, on August 15, 2021. AFP
Taliban fighters take control of the Afghan presidential palace in Kabul, after the president Ashraf Ghani had fled the country, on August 15, 2021. AP
Hundreds of people run alongside a US Air Force transport plane on the runway of the international airport in Kabul on August 16, 2021, desperate to escape the Taliban capture of their country. Some held on to the jet as it took off and fell to their death. AP
Thousands of Afghans rush to the Hamid Karzai International Airport as they try to flee the Afghan capital of Kabul, on August 16, 2021. Getty Images
A US soldier points his gun at a man at Kabul airport on August 16, 2021, after a swift end to Afghanistan's 20-year war. Thousands of people mobbed the airport in a bid to flee. AFP
Crowds on the tarmac of Kabul International Airport, Afghanistan, on August 16, 2021. EPA
People clamber on top a plane at the Kabul airport on August 16, 2021. AFP
These Afghan passengers made it. They sit inside a plane and wait to leave Kabul. AFP
Afghan women, holding placards, gather to demand the protection of women's rights in front of the Presidential Palace in Kabul, on August 17, 2021. Getty Images
British citizens living in Afghanistan board a military plane to leave Kabul Airport, on August 16, 2021. Reuters
Luggage belonging to Afghan people, who were waiting to be evacuated. at the site of two suicide bombs, which killed scores of people including 13 US troops, at Kabul airport on August 27, 2021. AFP
Afghans, including those who worked for the US, Nato, the European Union and the United Nations, wait outside Hamid Karzai International Airport to flee the country, after Taliban took control of Kabul, on August 17, 2021. EPA
People queue at the Pakistan-Afghanistan border point in Chaman on August 17, 2021 to cross back to Afghanistan. AFP
People wait to board a French military transport plane on August 17, 2021 to escape Kabul and Taliban rule. AFP
Zabihullah Mujahid, Taliban spokesman, gives his first press conference in Kabul on August 17, 2021. The new leadership said it would not seek revenge on those who had fought against them and would protect the rights of Afghan women within the rules of Sharia. EPA
Young men who say they deserted the Afghan military trudge through the countryside in Tatvan, eastern Turkey, on August 17, 2021. Turkey was concerned about increased migration across the Iranian border as Afghans fled from the Taliban. AP
A young demonstrator at a vigil in support of Afghanistan at the West Los Angeles Federal Building, California on August 17, 2021. EPA
US National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan holds a press briefing to talk about the recent events in Afghanistan, at the White House on August 17,2021. EPA
A Taliban fighter walks past a beauty salon with images of women defaced using spray paint in Shar-e-Naw in Kabul on August 18, 2021. AFP
People among the first evacuees from Kabul, arrive at Frankfurt International Airport in western Germany in the early hours of August 18, 2021. AFP
A transport plane evacuating refugees out of Afghanistan lands at Al Maktoum International Airport in Dubai, August 19, 2021. Pawan Singh / The National
Afghanistan's former president Ashraf Ghani talks in video message, somewhere in the UAE, on August 18, 2021, in his first media appearance since the fall of Kabul only days earlier. Reuters
Displaced children wait for the next flight at Hamid Karzai International Airport, Kabul on August 19, 2021. AFP
An Afghan man waves a national flag to celebrate the 102nd Independence Day of Afghanistan in Kabul on August 19, 2021, days after the Taliban's military takeover of the country. AFP
The US military helps to reunite families at Hamid Karzai International Airport on August 20, 2021. AFP
A US Marine comforts an infant while they wait for the mother during an evacuation at Hamid Karzai International Airport on August 21, 2021. Reuters
New personnel in the Afghan security forces take part in military training in Panjshir province on August 21, 2021. AFP
US President Joe Biden speaks to his national security team during a briefing on the situation in Afghanistan, on August 22, 2021, in Washington. AFP
Mexico's Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard welcomes members of Afghanistan's robotics team after arriving in Mexico to apply for humanitarian status on August 24, 2021. Reuters
Belongings of Afghan people, who were evacuated from Kabul, are laid on the ground at Torrejon Military Air Base on August 24, 2021 in Madrid. Getty Images
Volunteers and medical staff unload bodies from a pickup truck outside a hospital after two powerful explosions, which killed at least six people, outside the airport in Kabul on August 26, 2021. AFP
Flag-draped coffins of service members killed in action are loaded on to a transport aircraft during a ramp ceremony at Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul on August 27, 2021. Reuters
Afghan evacuees at the Emirates Humanitarian City, Abu Dhabi, on August 28, 2021. Victor Besa / The National
Smoke billows after an explosion near the Hamid Karzai International Airport, in Kabul on August 29, 2021. EPA
A vigil for Max Soviak, one of 13 US service members killed in the airport suicide bombing in Afghanistan's capital Kabul, in Berlin Heights, Ohio on August 29, 2021. Reuters
A Taliban member stands guard near a vehicle which was used to fire rockets at the Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul on August 30, 2021. EPA
World Health Organisation supplies land in Afghanistan.
Photo: WHO
Major Gen Chris Donahue, commander of the US Army 82nd Airborne Division, XVIII Airborne Corps, boards a C-17 cargo plane at the Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul on August 30, 2021. His departure closes the US mission to evacuate US citizens, Afghan Special Immigrant Visa applicants and vulnerable Afghans. AFP
Fireworks after the last US aircraft took off from the airport in Kabul early on August 31, 2021, signalling its complete withdrawal after 20 years in the country. AFP
Afghans wait for the banks to open in Kabul on August 31, 2021. AFP
An Afghan Air Force A-29 attack aircraft inside a hangar at the airport in Kabul on August 31, 2021, after the US pulled all its troops out of the country. AFP
Taliban fighters sit in the cockpit of an Afghan Air Force aircraft at the airport in Kabul on August 31, 2021. AFP
An Afghan resistance movement and anti-Taliban uprising forces rest as they patrol on a hilltop in Panjshir province on September 1,2021. Panjshir remains the last major holdout of anti-Taliban forces led by Ahmad Massoud, son of the famed mujahideen leader Ahmed Shah Massoud. AFP
The UAE sends a plane carrying urgent medical and food aid to Afghanistan, as part of its contribution to provide the basic and necessary needs of thousands of Afghan families, especially the most vulnerable groups such as women, children and the elderly, September 3, 2021. Wam
Afghan women's rights defenders and civil activists protest to call on the Taliban for the preservation of their achievements and education, in front of the presidential palace in Kabul on September 3, 2021. Reuters
The main money exchange market in Kabul reopens on September 4, 10 days after the Taliban takeover. Currency dealers have been hit hard by the fall in value of the Afghani currency. EPA
Passengers board a plane as domestic flights resume across Afghanistan, at Ahmad Shah Baba International Airport in Kandahar on September 5, 2021. EPA
Protesters reflected in the sunglasses of a demonstrator during a rally in support of Afghanistan's people after the takeover of the country by the Taliban, at the Place de la Republique, in Paris on September 5, 2021. AFP
A Taliban fighter stands guard at a market in Kabul on September 5, 2021. AFP
A suspected ISIS member sits blindfolded in a Taliban Special Forces' car in Kabul on September 5, 2021. Reuters
Children stand outside the former US embassy in Kabul where the banner of the 'Islamic Emirate' has replaced previous murals, on September 8, 2021. Stefanie Glinski for The National
A veiled student speaks to a gathering of female students before a pro-Taliban rally at the Shaheed Rabbani Education University in Kabul on September 11, 2021. AFP
Taliban fighters take a selfie after they stormed and overran the home of the Afghan warlord Abdul Rashid Dostum in the Sherpur neighborhood of Kabul. on September 11, 2021. AFP
Members of Afghanistan's national girls football team arrive at the Pakistan Football Federation in Lahore on September 15, 2021, a month after the hardline Taliban swept back into power. AFP
Afghan students separated by a partition attend a class at Mirwais Neeka University in Kandahar on September 20, 2021. The Taliban had officially announced the segregation of male and female students in all government and private universities. EPA
A young girl from Afghanistan hides under a truck carrying fruit and vegetables as she attempts to smuggle herself over the border from Afghanistan into Pakistan on September 12, 2021. Everyday dozens of children from Afghanistan smuggle themselves over the border into Pakistan to sell Paan and other goods before smuggling themselves back again. At least one child is injured each day trying to cross the border like this. Oliver Marsden for The National
Afghan girls at a school in Kandahar on September 26, 2021. AFP
Afghans gather outside the passport office after Taliban officials announced they will start issuing passports to its citizens again, in Kabul, October 6, 2021. Reuters
Sohail Ahmadi, an Afghan baby boy who went missing during the disordered evacuation process in Kabul after the takeover by the Taliban in August 2021, is reunited with his grandfather and aunt on January 10, 2022. EPA
Zakia, an economics student who dropped out of university after the Taliban took power, at her home on the outskirts of Kabul on January 24, 2022. AFP
A burqa-clad woman walks along a street in Kabul on May 7, 2022. The Taliban had just imposed some of the harshest restrictions on Afghanistan's women since they seized power, ordering them to cover fully in public, ideally with the traditional burqa. AFP
An Afghan vendor displays a burqa at his shop at Mandawi market in Kabul on May 8, 2022. AFP
Khatira Ahmadi (L) and Tehmina (R), Afghan presenters at Tolo TV, read news at the studio in Kabul on May 23. Female television presenters and reporters in Afghanistan appeared with their faces covered to comply with a mandate issued by the Taliban. EPA
Afghan women prisoners in Kandahar on July 26. EPA
As international forces left Afghanistan last year and the Taliban took over control, billions of dollars in international aid were withdrawn, the country's foreign currency reserves were frozen and the banking system collapsed.
The subsequent economic crisis and the country’s worst drought in 30 years have plunged households into poverty.
Children interviewed for the study said the economic situation was driving an increase in child marriages in their communities, and that this was affecting girls more than boys.
Of the children who said they had been asked to marry to improve their family’s financial situation in the past year, 88 per cent were girls.
"Parishad", 15, who was interviewed for the study and lives in northern Afghanistan, said she did not go to school because her parents could not afford to feed their children, let alone pay for her books and stationery.
Her family’s situation has rapidly deteriorated in the past 12 months and they were evicted from their home because they could not pay the rent.
The landlord offered to buy one of Parishad’s siblings but her parents refused.
Mobile library visits children in Afghanistan without schools - in pictures Afghan children attend an educational event organised by Pen Path, a civil society initiative providing education to Afghan children in areas where there is no school, in Kandahar, Afghanistan. All photos by EPA
Afghan children attend an educational event organized by Pen Path, a civil society intiative providing education to Afghan children in areas where there is no school.
Afghan children attend an educational event organised by Pen Path, a civil society initiative providing education to Afghan children in areas where there is no school, in Kandahar, Afghanistan.
Afghan children attend an educational event organised by Pen Path, a civil society initiative providing education to Afghan children in areas where there is no school, in Kandahar, Afghanistan.
Afghan children attend an educational event organised by Pen Path, a civil society initiative providing education to Afghan children in areas where there is no school, in Kandahar, Afghanistan.
Afghan civil society activists attend an educational event organised by Pen Path, an initiative providing education to Afghan children in areas where there is no school, in Kandahar, Afghanistan.
Afghan children attend an educational event organised by Pen Path, a civil society initiative providing education to Afghan children in areas where there is no school, in Kandahar, Afghanistan.
Afghan children attend an educational event organised by Pen Path, a civil society initiative providing education to Afghan children in areas where there is no school, in Kandahar, Afghanistan.
“Some days my father cannot bring food," she said. "My brothers wake up at midnight and cry for food.
"I don’t eat and I save my food for my brothers and sisters. When my brothers and sisters ask for food, I get upset and cry a lot.
"I go to my neighbour’s house and ask for food. Sometimes they’ll help and give me food and sometimes they say they don’t have anything to give me.
“When we left our old house to come to this house, I was deeply upset and I said, ‘Why are we leaving again, why are we facing these problems again?’
"I was deeply angry, and it was a very difficult time and I cried."
“I would love to go to school. When I see other girls going to school, I wish I could go to school too. Every month we change houses and it’s difficult for us to go to school.
"We also don’t have any stationery and we need money to buy books. I can’t tolerate it. I can’t do anything about it.”
Chris Nyamandi, Save the Children's director for Afghanistan, said: "Life is dire for children in Afghanistan, one year since the Taliban took control. Children are going to bed hungry night after night.
"They’re exhausted and wasting away, unable to play and study like they used to. They’re spending their days toiling in brick factories, collecting rubbish and cleaning homes instead of going to school.
“Girls are bearing the brunt of the deteriorating situation. They’re missing more meals, suffering from isolation and emotional distress and are staying home while boys go to school.
"This is a humanitarian crisis but also a child rights catastrophe."
Women protest against Taliban rule in Afghanistan - in pictures Taliban soldiers stand guard as women carry placards during a rally in Kabul, Afghanistan. All photos: EPA
Afghan women activists demand food, jobs and education for girls during a protest in Kabul.
Afghan women demonstrate during a rally in Kabul, Afghanistan.
The Taliban have banned women from work and girls from secondary schools. EPA
Women carry placards during a rally in Kabul.
Afghan women have intensified their anti-Taliban protests despite the group's harsh crackdown on demonstrations.
In the last three months of their rule, the Taliban have suppressed several women's protests in Kabul and other Afghan provinces.
The Taliban have used violence against protesters, including using pepper spray.
Mr Nyamandi believes the solution cannot be found in Afghanistan alone and global leaders need to provide immediate humanitarian funding, revive the banking system and support the economy.
If these issues are not addressed, he fears "children’s lives will be lost, and more boys and girls will lose their childhoods to labour, marriage and rights violations".
Since the Taliban came sweeping back into power, Save the Children has reached more than 2.5 million people, including 1.4 million children.
The charity is delivering health, nutrition, education, child protection, shelter, water, sanitation and hygiene and food security, and livelihoods support to people in 15 provinces throughout Afghanistan.
Female journalists in Afghanistan face new reality under Taliban - video This browser does not support the video element.
Updated: August 09, 2022, 11:01 PM