Between January and October 2024, humanitarian partners reached 17.7 million people with at least one form of humanitarian assistance and up to 3.3 million people with three different types of sectoral support. Although this represents a broad reach in absolute terms, 55 per cent (9.6 million) of the 17.7 million people reached overall received food assistance, highlighting the extent to which food assistance continues to drive overall response figures while also overshadowing the millions of people who will require multiple rounds of assistance throughout the year to ensure their needs are adequately met.
The response was enabled by a combination of new funding as of 27 October 2024 (US$1.14 billion) and funds carried over from 2023 ($412.5 million). However, $1.92 billion (62 per cent) of the $3.06 billion required to deliver humanitarian assistance remained unfunded as of October 2024. At the same time, new needs continue to be generated by sudden-onset crises while simultaneously exacerbating underlying vulnerabilities.
The large-scale provision of humanitarian assistance, particularly food distributions and seasonal support, has continued throughout the first ten months of 2024. Looking ahead, partners will focus efforts on providing more integrated support in line with the nature and scale of multisectoral needs that is informed by a biannual gaps analysis exercise, enhanced inter-sectoral reach calculations and greater transparency in reach data, including disaggregation of food distribution by rounds of assistance. Additionally, the Inter-Cluster Coordination Team (ICCT) has started implementing its analysis of the Inter-Sector Winter Prioritization, providing real-time information to guide the allocation of limited resources to areas with the highest sector-specific and/or multisector needs throughout the winter. The monitoring of winter response, which largely started in September, has been integrated into the monthly response dashboards for October and will continue through December.
In a context of continued humanitarian needs and operational complexity, the humanitarian community’s ability to continue to stay and deliver life-saving assistance will be contingent on flexible funding, enabling financial systems, assurances of aid worker safety and principled humanitarian response. This includes ensuring that women are able to access the assistance and services they require and that Afghan women humanitarian workers can participate in the response safely, meaningfully and comprehensively.
Disclaimer
- UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs
- To learn more about OCHA's activities, please visit https://www.unocha.org/.