Close
The page header's logo
Home

Help

 Library
Login
FAO Staff Login
Register
0
Selected 
Invert selection
Deselect all
Deselect all
 Click here to refresh results
 Click here to refresh results
Terms and conditions
Privacy notice
Digital Asset Management (DAM) by Orange Logic
Go to Login page
 Hide details
doctype icon
Explore More Collections
Conceptually similar
AFGHANISTAN / FOOD SECURITY
play button
AFGHANISTAN / FOOD SECURITY 
AFGHANISTAN LOCUST OUTBREAK
play button
AFGHANISTAN LOCUST OUTBREAK 
FAO / EL NIÑO ANTICIPATORY ACTION
play button
FAO / EL NIÑO ANTICIPATORY ACTION 
FAO/ HUMANITARIAN CRISES AND HUNGER DEPUTY DIRECTOR-GENERAL INTERVIEW
play button
FAO/ HUMANITARIAN CRISES AND HUNGER DEPUTY DIRECTOR-GENERAL INTERVIEW 
Afghanistan: Winter Seeds Distribution
play button
Afghanistan: Winter Seeds Distribution 
FAO in Emergencies
play button
FAO in Emergencies 
SOUTH SUDAN / ENHANCING PASTORALISTS' RESILIENCE TO CLIMATE CHANGE
play button
SOUTH SUDAN / ENHANCING PASTORALISTS' RESILIENCE TO CLIMATE CHANGE 
AFGHANISTAN 2021. Agricultural livelihood support to acutely food insecure people in Afghanistan
play button
AFGHANISTAN 2021. Agricultural livelihood support to acutely food insecure people in Afghanistan 
AFGHANISTAN / MOROCCAN LOCUST OUTBREAK
play button
AFGHANISTAN / MOROCCAN LOCUST OUTBREAK 
Indigenous People Day 2021: Indigenous Peoples food systems are key elements for sustainable development
play button
Indigenous People Day 2021: Indigenous Peoples food systems are key elements for sustainable development 
Ukraine: Food Security - Interview with Chief Economist Maximo Torero
play button
Ukraine: Food Security - Interview with Chief Economist Maximo Torero 
FAO/ TACKLING THE GENDER GAP IS CRUCIAL TO FIGHT FOOD INSECURITY AND THE CLIMATE CRISIS
play button
FAO/ TACKLING THE GENDER GAP IS CRUCIAL TO FIGHT FOOD INSECURITY AND THE CLIMATE CRISIS 
FAO’S SUPPORT TO BUILD CLIMATE RESILIENCE IN SOMALIA
play button
FAO’S SUPPORT TO BUILD CLIMATE RESILIENCE IN SOMALIA 
Somalia / Food Insecurity
play button
Somalia / Food Insecurity 
Security Council: FAO DG on Global Food Security
play button
Security Council: FAO DG on Global Food Security 
SOUTH SUDAN BECHDOL'S MISSION
play button
SOUTH SUDAN BECHDOL'S MISSION 
Locust Outbreak in Kenya
play button
Locust Outbreak in Kenya 
FAO / GLOBAL REPORT ON FOOD CRISES
play button
FAO / GLOBAL REPORT ON FOOD CRISES 
Sri Lanka: Addressing Water Scarcity
play button
Sri Lanka: Addressing Water Scarcity 
Food Crises Report 2021
play button
Food Crises Report 2021 
Action button
 Add to collection
 Download
AFGHANISTAN / IMPROVING FOOD SECURITY 
In Afghanistan food insecurity remains alarmingly high. Climate change impacts affect the humanitarian situation in the country, explains Alexander Jones, Director of FAO’s Resource Mobilization Division, who recently visited Afghanistan to see how FAO is helping farmers get back on their feet. 
Country Afghanistan
Duration 3m11s 
Edit Version International
Video Type Video News Release (VNR)
Date 04/03/2024 
File size 420.65 MB 
Unique ID UF15WCA 
All editorial uses permitted 
Production details and shotlist
UNFAO Source FAO Video
Shotlist STORY: AFGHANISTAN / IMPROVING FOOD SECURITY
TRT: 3’:11’’
SOURCE: FAO
RESTRICTIONS: PLEASE CREDIT FAO ON SCREEN
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH / PASHTO / NATS
DATELINE: 19-20 FEBRUARY 2024, KANDAHAR PROVINCE, AFGHANISTAN

SHOTLIST:
19 FEBRUARY 2024, DAMAN DISTRICT, KANDAHAR PROVINCE, AFGHANISTAN
1. Wide shot, dry land
2. Pan left, sheep grazing on dry land

20 FEBRUARY 2024, ZHIRAI DISTRICT, KANDAHAR PROVINCE, AFGHANISTAN
3. Wide shot, dry riverbed
4. SOUNDBITE (PASTHO) Haji Obaidullah, farmer, Zhirai district, Kandahar province: “Our vineyards and pomegranate orchards dried up, and we were unable to grow corn and mung beans. Our winter crop production was reduced by half due to the drought.”
5. Tilt up, dry water canal
6. Pan right, riverbed retaining wall
7. SOUNDBITE (PASHTO) Haji Obaidullah, farmer, Zhirai district, Kandahar province: “On the other hand, when rain does fall, it is no longer, regular and timely due to climate change. Severe floods wash our agricultural land. We asked FAO for support. They agreed and constructed water-retaining walls for us. As a result, our youths benefited from cash for work and also our land is protected from floods.”
8. Tracking shot, Alexander Jones, Director of FAO’s Resource Mobilization Division (center-right) and Richard Trenchard, FAO Representative in Afghanistan, (center-left) visiting the district
9. Pan right, Alexander Jones, Director of FAO’s Resource Mobilization Division (center-right) and Richard Trenchard, FAO Representative in Afghanistan, (center-left) meeting local farmers

19 FEBRUARY 2024, DAMAN DISTRICT, KANDAHAR PROVINCE, AFGHANISTAN
10. Pan left, sign reading “Emergency livelihoods assistance to safeguard food and nutrition security and sustain local production of food among most vulnerable rural families affected by multiple shocks in Afghanistan.”
11. Med shot, check dams

20 FEBRUARY 2024, ZHIRAI DISTRICT, KANDAHAR PROVINCE, AFGHANISTAN
12. SOUNDBITE (ENGLISH) Alexander Jones, Director of the FAO’s Resource Mobilization Division: “This is a major project to rehabilitate a riverbed. We have a situation, as you can see over here, where the river was cutting away important farmland and destroying a really important irrigation canal behind me there. This is an area which is normally irrigated with the irrigation canal and some additional wells that you can see in the background as well.”
13. Tracking shot, riverbed retention wall
14. Pan left, wheat fields
15. SOUNDBITE (ENGLISH) Alexander Jones, Director of the FAO’s Resource Mobilization Division: “It's a project which employed over 250 men and 30 women over a three-month period to build 1200 meters of retaining wall that you can see here to control the riverbed floods during the peak rainy season.”

19 FEBRUARY 2024, DAMAN DISTRICT, KANDAHAR PROVINCE, AFGHANISTAN
16. Tracking shot, check dam
17. Tilt up, wheat fields
18. Wide shot, Alexander Jones, Director of FAO’s Resource Mobilization Division (center-left) and Richard Trenchard, FAO Representative in Afghanistan, (center-right) meeting local farmers
19. Med shot, Alexander Jones, Director of FAO’s Resource Mobilization Division (center) speaking
20. SOUNDBITE (ENGLISH) Alexander Jones, Director of the FAO’s Resource Mobilization Division: “What's most amazing to me is their awareness of the fact that their agricultural systems need to change, to evolve, to adapt to what they're facing, climate change. Then they want to move into horticultural crops. They realize that farming systems must evolve. But for us, as FAO the most precious part here is the fact that they already know what these challenges are and we can support them. We can help them with so many ways.”
21. Alexander Jones, Director of FAO’s Resource Mobilization Division (center-left) and Richard Trenchard, FAO Representative in Afghanistan, (center-right) meeting pastoralists
22. Med shot, sheep grazing
23. Pan left, sheep grazing
24. Wide shot, man walking on a check dam 
Script In Afghanistan food insecurity remains alarmingly high. The adverse impact of extreme climatic conditions such as an extended drought combined with other natural hazards such as flooding and earthquakes exacerbates the population's vulnerability, with over 15 million people, or 36 percent of the population, being food insecure.

Haji Obaidullah, a farmer from Zhirai district in Kandahar, says this winter's drought has severely impacted food production.

SOUNDBITE (PASTHO) Haji Obaidullah, farmer, Zhirai district, Kandahar province:
“Our vineyards and pomegranate orchards dried up, and we were unable to grow corn and mung beans. Our winter crop production was reduced by half due to the drought.”

Nevertheless, he explains that it is the combination of droughts followed by flooding that has significantly damaged his community’s livelihoods over the last years.

SOUNDBITE (PASHTO) Haji Obaidullah, farmer, Zhirai district, Kandahar province:
“On the other hand, when rain does fall, it is no longer, regular and timely due to climate change. Severe floods wash our agricultural land. We asked FAO for support. They agreed and constructed water-retaining walls for us. As a result, our youths benefited from cash for work and also our land is protected from floods.”

Climate change impacts affect the humanitarian situation in the country, explains Alexander Jones, Director of FAO’s Resource Mobilization Division, who recently visited Afghanistan to see how FAO is helping farmers get back on their feet. Drought, water scarcity, and rapidly descending ground water levels hit farmers and pastoralists the hardest, according to Jones, who emphasized the importance of rehabilitating infrastructures in the Zhirai district.

To mitigate climate shocks and improve food security the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) over the last two years has supported communities in Afghanistan through cash-for-work programmes in building water management infrastructures including water retaining walls and more than 6000 check dams to reduce the impact of floods, replenish groundwater levels and facilitate irrigation, thus improving crop yields and providing families with reliable food sources.

SOUNDBITE (ENGLISH) Alexander Jones, Director of the FAO’s Resource Mobilization Division:
“This is a major project to rehabilitate a riverbed. We have a situation, as you can see over here, where the river was cutting away important farmland and destroying a really important irrigation canal behind me there. This is an area which is normally irrigated with the irrigation canal and some additional wells that you can see in the background as well.”

The World Bank funded construction of retaining walls through a cash-for-work programme provided the community of Zhirai with a much-needed source of income and protected agricultural land from floods.

SOUNDBITE (ENGLISH) Alexander Jones, Director of the FAO’s Resource Mobilization Division:
“It's a project which employed over 250 men and 30 women over a three-month period to build 1200 meters of retaining wall that you can see here to control the riverbed floods during the peak rainy season.”

Traditionally, men perform all public works in Afghanistan. However, FAO convinced the community to let women be trained to weave gabion meshes in their homes, thus extending employment benefits to the most needy women-led households in the area.

In the last year, FAO supported farmers with concrete actions by providing high-quality wheat seeds, livestock assistance and cash transfers. This has helped improve agricultural productivity and food security in the country.

The UN Food and Agriculture Organization is currently working closely with rural communities to better understand the kind of support they need, says Alexander Jones after a meeting with members of the Daman community in Kandahar province.

SOUNDBITE (ENGLISH) Alexander Jones, Director of the FAO’s Resource Mobilization Division:
“What's most amazing to me is their awareness of the fact that their agricultural systems need to change, to evolve, to adapt to what they're facing, climate change. Then they want to move into horticultural crops. They realize that farming systems must evolve. But for us, as FAO the most precious part here is the fact that they already know what these challenges are and we can support them. We can help them with so many ways.”

The Director of the FAO’s Resource Mobilization Division stressed that investing in anticipatory action is crucial to increasing rural communities' resilience in the face of stresses.

Afghanistan is the FAO's single largest country programme, where it continues to operate despite ongoing political instability. The Organization has over 400 employees on the ground and is present in all 34 provinces in the country.

FAO's work with other partners in the country has made it possible to reach over 10 million farmers in 2023, ultimately contributing to the gradual reduction in food insecurity numbers. These interventions play a vital role since 80 percent of the country’s population earn income from agriculture. 
Library
/
FAO OCC
/
Video Team
/
FAO Video 2023 / 2024 / 2025
/
FAO Field Projects
/
By Country - FAO Field Projects
/
Afghanistan
/
20240403 Improving Food Security
/
AFGHANISTAN / IMPROVING FOOD SECURITY
(Standard Video) 
Tags
Beneficiaries
Climate Change
Droughts
FAO logo (clothing)
Farmers
Farms
Alternative Versions and Supporting Documents
Find different versions and transcription documents to download