SOCIETY — June 22, 2026

UN Agency Estimates 16 Million People in Afghanistan Need Water and Sanitation Assistance in 2026

The 2025 drought affected at least 3.4 million people in northern and western provinces, damaging agriculture, livestock, and livelihoods. The agency called for more urgent food and humanitarian support as water scarcity alters daily life and exposes children to greater health risks.

The Ehtebar Desk — originates with Amu TV — corroborated by Khaama Press2 min read

UN Agency Estimates 16 Million People in Afghanistan Need Water and Sanitation Assistance in 2026
Image courtesy Amu TV

The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs estimates that 16 million people in Afghanistan will need assistance in the water and sanitation sector in 2026. This estimate highlights the scale of the challenge posed by water scarcity in the country.

According to the agency, water scarcity is altering daily life for families and communities. Children face greater health risks as a result of these conditions, and communities are under increasing strain as they attempt to manage limited resources.

The agency also noted the impact of the 2025 drought. At least 3.4 million people in northern and western provinces were affected by this event. Agriculture suffered damage, as did livestock and the livelihoods of many residents in those areas.

Calls have been made for more urgent food and humanitarian support to address the situation. The broader context includes recurring droughts, inadequate infrastructure, poverty, and reduced international aid, all of which contribute to the humanitarian crisis affecting water access.

These factors together are exacerbating the difficulties faced by the population in securing clean water and sanitation services.

Read the original reporting at Amu TV

Reliability assessment

Two independent sources corroborate the core OCHA statement on the 16 million figure and water scarcity impacts with direct attribution to the organization; no disputes on the event or quote exist

The source language mixes facts with framing or advocacy wording. Khaama Press: "exposing children to greater health risks", "worsening conditions", "critical humanitarian challenge", "intensifying pressure on already fragile communities" — these phrases add emotional framing and urgency beyond neutral reporting of statistics and warnings.

Independent web corroboration

A separate web search returned 8 matching reports. A selection:

Across the newsrooms

Where reports agree

  • OCHA states 16 million people need water and sanitation assistance in 2026
  • Water scarcity is impacting daily life, health risks for children, and community coping mechanisms

Filed by 2 outlets

Filed under

SocietyOCHA, Water Scarcity, Humanitarian Crisis, Drought, Afghanistan

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