Disaster For the first time in modern history a capital city is on the verge of running dry

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By Alysha Bibi, Rhea Mogul and Masoud Popalzai, CNN
Sat July 19, 2025

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An Afghan girl stands next canisters as she waits to fill them up with water in Kabul, Afghanistan, November 13, 2021.

As the sun rises over Kabul’s parched mountains, a family’s daily struggle to find water – and to make it last – is about to begin.

The sound of water tankers rumbling through Raheela’s neighborhood in the Afghan capital prompts the 42-year-old mother of four to rush out to the street to fill her family’s battered buckets and jerrycans. The family’s supply is always running low, she says, and every liter is expensive, stretching nerves and their budgets to breaking point.

“We don’t have access to (drinking) water at all,” Raheela, who goes by one name, told CNN. “Water shortage is a huge problem affecting our daily life.”

Kabul is inching toward catastrophe. It could soon become the first modern capital in the world to run completely dry according to a recent report by Mercy Corps, a non-government organization that warns the crisis could lead to economic collapse.

Population growth, the climate crisis, and relentless over-extraction have depleted groundwater levels, experts say, and nearly half the city’s boreholes have already gone dry.

Raheela’s family must pay for every drop of water, and watch how they use it carefully, sacrificing food and other essentials just to drink and bathe.

“We are deeply concerned,” she said. “We hope for more rain, but if things get worse, I don’t know how we’ll survive,” she told CNN.

It’s an emergency that “is not just a water issue,” warned Marianna Von Zahn, Mercy Corps’ Afghanistan director of programs. “It’s a health crisis, an economic crisis, and a humanitarian emergency all in one.”

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An Afghan boy fills his potable water tanker from a pump on the outskirts of Kabul on April 27, 2025.

A potent mix​

Just three decades ago, Kabul’s population was less than 2 million, but the toppling of the Taliban in 2001 led to an influx of migrants, lured by the promise of increased security and economic possibility.

As its population grew, so did the demand for water.

Kabul relies almost entirely on groundwater, replenished by snow and glacier melt from the nearby Hindu Kush mountains. But years of mismanagement and over-extraction have caused those levels to drop by up to 30 meters over the last decade, according to Mercy Corps.

Kabul now extracts 44 million cubic meters more groundwater each year than nature can replenish, Mercy Corps said, a staggering imbalance that’s steadily draining the city’s reserves and its residents’ finances.

Some families, like Ahmad Yasin’s, have dug deeper wells, searching for more water to fill their buckets.

Yasin, 28, lives in a joint family of 10 in the city’s north. For months, he has queued along with his brother for hours every day at the nearby mosque, which has access to a big well, to bring full buckets home for his children, parents, nieces, and nephews.

“That was holding us back from our work and was affecting our income,” he said. So they saved for six months, sacrificing food, to come up with 40,000 Afghanis ($550) to dig a well in their backyard.

Yasin and his brother dug 120 meters before they could find any water – and while this water is free to use for all their basic needs, they can’t drink it. “It’s not safe,” he said.

“Since we spent all our money on the well, we cannot afford to buy a water filter or purified water. Hence, we boil the well water for extended periods of time, let it cool and then drink it.”

Up to 80% of Kabul’s groundwater is contaminated, according to Mercy Corps, a consequence of widespread pit latrine use and industrial waste pollution.

Diarrhea and vomiting are “problems people experience all the time in the city,” said Sayed Hamed, 36, who lives with his wife, three children and two elderly parents in the northwestern Taimani district.

“We often get sick due to contaminated water either by drinking in someone else’s house, in a restaurant, or even by brushing our teeth with the well water,” the government worker said.

The crisis is further compounded by Kabul’s vulnerability to climate change.

“We are getting more and more rain, but less and less snow,” said Najibullah Sadid, a water resource management researcher and member of the Afghan Water and Environment Professionals Network. “That’s impacting a city which has less infrastructure to regulate the flash floods… Snow was helping us, but now we have less, and that’s harming us in terms of groundwater recharge.”

If current trends continue, UNICEF predicts Kabul could run out of groundwater by 2030.

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Neighbors gather to fill their drums with drinking water in Azara neighborhood in Kabul on June 14, 2023.

When water runs dry, many turn to tankers​

Those without the means to dig hundreds of meters for water are at the mercy of private companies or must rely on donations.

Rustam Khan Taraki spends as much as 30% of his income on water, mostly buying from licensed tanker sellers.

But for families who can’t afford to spend this much, the only option is to walk often long distances to mosques, which can provide water.

Dawn sees Hamed, the government worker, lining up for hours at a nearby well to fill two buckets for his family. During the day, two of his children – 13 and nine years old – line up for a refill, sometimes skipping school to carry heavy buckets up their steep hill in the scorching sun.

The crisis is taking a toll on the children’s future, said Von Zahn from Mercy Corps. “The hours that children should be spending in school, they are now basically spending on fetching water for their families.” she said.

“These harmful coping strategies further deepen the cycle of poverty and vulnerability for women and children.”

Women shoulder much of this crisis — forced to walk for hours across Kabul just to fetch what little water they can, risking their safety under the Taliban’s oppressive rule which prohibits them from going outside without a mahram, or male guardian.

“It is not easy for a woman to go out, especially under the current circumstances where women need to have male company from her family to be able to go out,” a 22-year-old Kabul resident, who did not want to disclose her name for safety reasons, told CNN.

“There are numerous difficulties for every woman or girl to go out alone to get water. They could be harassed or bothered on the way,” she said.

CNN has contacted the Taliban for a response.

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An Afghan boy sits atop a potable water tanker on a hillside in Kabul on April 27, 2025.

A dire future​

Beyond the climate crisis, population growth and mismanagement, Kabul’s water crisis is compounded by deep political turmoil.

The Taliban seized control of the country in August 2021 following the chaotic withdrawal of US-led forces after nearly two decades of war, tipping the country to the brink of economic collapse as development and security assistance to the country froze.

Since then, humanitarian aid – aimed at funding urgent needs through non-profit organizations and bypassing government control – filled some of the gap. But US President Donald Trump’s decision earlier this year to halt foreign aid has further set back the country with crippling consequences.

The freeze in US Agency for International Development (USAID) funds is “one of the biggest impacts,” said Von Zahn from Mercy Corps. By early 2025, only about $8 million of the $264 million required for water and sanitation had been delivered.

“So what we’re seeing is a dangerous mix: collapsing local systems, frozen funding, and growing regional friction — all while ordinary Afghans face a worsening crisis every day,” she said.

That leaves the future of many living in Kabul in limbo.

Years ago, when Raheela and her family moved to their current neighborhood, the rent was cheaper, the mosque had water and life was manageable, she said.

Now, she doesn’t know how much longer they can survive in the city.

“We won’t have any other choice but to be displaced again,” she said, “Where will we go from here? I don’t know.”
 
You can blame tribalism and crazy outdated beliefs that may have made some sense centuries ago.
We can't go back in there and tell them to fuck off back to the mountains again.
I don't want to blame them, or try to "build democracy" for them. I just want to stop the sociopaths who use sob stories to guilt the West into subsidizing Third World populations to 10x their sustainable limit, then turn around and demand they be imported to the First World.

Africa could not feed its few hundred million in the 80s, and all Live Aid and trillions in government welfare did was add another billion that are permanently reliant on Western tax dollars. The only "aid" for the next 20 years should be free tube-tying and vasectomies.
 
Civilians are not the same as a country's government, especially when their country is a theocratic and repressive hell that doesn't even give their own people the facade of electing their politicians. Don't condemn them to a fate as horrible as this just because of the sins of a corrupt government.
I guess the locals should have used some of the training, arms, and equipment the US provided them over the space of 18 years to kill the Taliban instead of just doing nothing when they rolled into town.
 
Kabul is inching toward catastrophe. It could soon become the first modern capital in the world to run completely dry according to a recent report by Mercy Corps, a non-government organization that warns the crisis could lead to economic collapse.
"Modern capital?"

That's a strange way to say "medieval shithole."
Africa could not feed its few hundred million in the 80s, and all Live Aid and trillions in government welfare did was add another billion that are permanently reliant on Western tax dollars.
Not even that. Most of that "aid" was stolen by the very warlords and kleptocrats who deliberately caused the famines in the first place.

Incidentally, Bob Geldof is a scumbag and a scammer. He makes notable douchebag Bono look like a saint in comparison.
 
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I guess the locals should have used some of the training, arms, and equipment the US provided them over the space of 18 years to kill the Taliban instead of just doing nothing when they rolled into town.
Extremely easy to say when you're well fed, healthy, and live somewhere with electricity instead of just wondering where your next glass of water or loaf of bread is going to come from each day in a desert with infrastructure that has been bombed to kingdom come and back over the span of decades
 
Their army had the infrastructure because we built it for them and their army melted away rather than fight. Their cities had the infrastructure because we built it for them and their cities capitulated rather than resist. The locals said all the right words about fighting to the bitter end rather than going back to rule under the Taliban and when the rubber met the road they did jack shit. When asked afterwards they just complained that American didn't do their fighting for them.

There were whopping 75,000 Taliban versus a country with a population of 40 million. They didn't want o do anything but have freedom handed to them on a silver platter courtesy of the American soldier and taxpayer. They made their decision.
 
You can blame tribalism and crazy outdated beliefs that may have made some sense centuries ago. Like the reason Indians don't want toilets indoors was from way before modern plumbing. The uncleanliness they are afraid of is virtually unknown in the west. An indoor squathole with no plumbing is going to be a disease factory. A modern toilet is not. Yet many of them still don't get it. And it may take a long time for them to understand.

All you can hope for is that future generations realise how backwards their parents are and try to modernize. They really have to do most of this themselves. Because we can't stand around making sure the government treats them right. Let's hope someday the Taliban is long gone and people are free. We can't go back in there and tell them to fuck off back to the mountains again.
When the afghans get sick of the taliban, they will get rid of the taliban. They are apparently not yet sick of the taliban. No sympathy.
 
First off, Afghanistan is a literal fucking desert to the point where literally NOTHING grows in much of it, not even plants that can handle the desert. Nevada has sagebrush, Los Angeles/Mojave Desert has chaparral, Arizona has cactus, but Afghanistan has pretty much NOTHING AT FUCKING ALL. Add to that an occupation by a big superpower that was fueled by printed money flowing into the pockets of the buttbuddies of the superpower's Great Leader, with a commandment to build a modern democracy from a primitive shithole that had already seen a quarter century of war before the big guys showed up. So you got a city that had been bombed into rubble suddenly transformed into a larp of a modern Western city but without the resources to support it. The whole fucking country then pours in wanting a piece of the good life. Then the big boys walk away and leave behind a fundamental mismatch between a literal desert and a modern metropolis run by retards who can't buy supplies to sustain the place unlike say Phoenix, Arizona. This will eventually be what Aztlan (former US Southwest after the shitskin revolution) will look like-giant cities in a nation cut off from the supplies that once supported them and 20 million taconiggers without tacos or even agua. When there is no more water, people literally go insane and kill each other before finally fleeing into the desert and fucking dying.
 
What infrastructure did the US build besides schools for girls?
You don't know how much money and engineering/construction we poured into that country? There's the Kabul-Kandahar Highway for a start, and:
  • To improve vital irrigation in this chronically dry country, the United States has rehabilitated more than 7,441 canals, underground irrigation tunnels, reservoirs, and dams by de-silting and cleaning waterways, repairing stone masonry, and building retaining walls.
  • Irrigation projects affecting 325,000 hectares are now nearly half complete, with 150,000 hectares already under irrigation.
  • Working with the Afghan government, the United States has rehabilitated 7,269 km of rural roads and completed more than 600 related road-reconstruction projects, including repair of retaining walls and culverts.
The United States has rehabilitated 74 bridges and tunnels, which are critical parts of the highway infrastructure in mountainous Afghanistan
  • Provided, through CARE, a quarter of Kabul 's water supply, focusing on the poorest districts.
  • Rehabilitated 3,637 potable-water supply projects, as well as the municipal water systems in Kandahar and Kunduz,
New courthouses will be built in all 16 provinces.
  • A telecommunications system that connects each of Afghanistan 's 32 provinces with Kabul is in place. This is a first step in helping the Afghans improve their ability to run their own affairs.
  • The United States has helped rebuild 13 Afghan ministries, including the Ministries of Agriculture, Health, and Education, and other institutions wiped out during the conflict and Taliban oppression. We are repairing buildings and record-keeping systems, and training competent managers and teachers.
Not just girls schools either:
  • The United States has repaired or constructed 205 schools, including primary schools, kindergartens, teacher-training colleges, vocational schools, and a university. Thirty-three more are under construction. [as of publishing of this source]
  • Rehabilitated 141 health clinics, birth centers, and hospitals, and 72 more are under construction. Provided operational support, including staffing, equipment, and pharmaceuticals, for 163 basic health clinics, obstetrics centers, hospitals, and feeding centers.
 
Civilians are not the same as a country's government, especially when their country is a theocratic and repressive hell that doesn't even give their own people the facade of electing their politicians. Don't condemn them to a fate as horrible as this just because of the sins of a corrupt government.
Who created and fought for that government?
 
Who created and fought for that government?
Honestly even if 100 percent of Afghanistan's population supported the taliban, that still doesn't mean that they should be condemned to just die of thirst in a desert because lol well u asked for it lmao, everyone should have a right to something as basic as shelter, food, and especially water, to say otherwise is honestly just barbaric to me. There's a reason in western democracies we have the rule of law and due process, because even if someone does commit even the most heinous of crimes, they're tried, convicted, and sentenced to prison to be deprived of arguably one of their most important rights, liberty, and even then we *still* don't sadistically deprive them of food and water until they look like holocaust victims.
 
Women can't leave home without a male guardian, and yet are still expected to bring heavy loads of water. If the men can't be bothered to do that themselves because that's ''not their job'' and their children die from dysentery, maybe that means their retarded genetics is bound to go extinct and at the end of the day, that's a good thing.
 
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