Afghanistan who is not safe not only has harmful implications for the area but also all over the world. The 9/11 attack proves it,” Shamroz Khan Masjidi, a political analyst Afghanistan, told DW.

Afghanistan is unstable and unsafe for decades, but the arrest of Taliban power last August has all regions hanged by utas. The war-hit by a war faces an unprecedented humanitarian crisis, which, according to many experts, can turn into conflicts of other violence.

However, the international community, overwhelmed by the Ukrainian crisis, seems to have been forgotten” about Afghanistan. The relatively small amount of attention they pay with a terrible situation at a

S Senator Lindse Graham summarizes the problem on Saturday by saying in the Munich panel in Afghanistan that what happens in Afghanistan in the coming days will not be a consequence of what might happen in Ukraine.

How do you deal with the Taliban?

But Afghans have suffered the consequences of “rushing” US withdrawals from Afghanistan – the most urgent to be poverty and unemployment.

According to Mahbuba Seraj, an Afghan journalist and activist of women’s rights, the humanitarian crisis in Afghanistan cannot be resolved through humanitarian assistance.

A radiating wound cannot be treated with the help of the band, “he said during the Munich security conference panel” Afghanistan Afghanistan: from ashes to ashes, “Afghanistan economics needs to be improved so that Afghans can be taken out of poverty.

But to lift the Afghan economy, the international community needs to be involved with the Taliban.

Hannah Neumann, a German member of the European Parliament, told DW that the West needed a balanced approach in dealing with the Taliban.

“It shouldn’t be about us won’t talk to them or if we talk to them, we must recognize it. Whatever we choose to do, it is important for us to help the general Afghanistan, especially women and children,” he said, as he added that humanitarian assistance must reach people in need.

For Moeed Yusuf, a national security advisor for Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan, Taliban is the fact that nothing can be ignored. He told the panel of Islamabad that terrorism would not be contained in the Afghan border if the humanitarian situation in the country did not improve.

Graham, however, rejected a compromise with the Taliban, said that the United States did not want to sustain the Taliban,” what he said would “never reform.”

Some in the West see a direct security threat from Afghanistan. Taliban, trying to gain international recognition and financial assistance, more likely to get a “diplomatic” approach than to use violent tactics. But this superficial tranquility may not last long.

If the humanitarian crisis worsens in Afghanistan, even the Taliban will not be able to manage the situation, as evidenced by the harsh “Islamic State” attack.

Salahuddin Ludin, a political expert in Afghanistan, told DW that life had become “very difficult” for most Afghans.

The international assistance organization has left the country. The Taliban cannot pay wages to government employees. The public health care sector in chaos,” he said.

Apart from the suffering of rural residents, even Afghanistan based in cities feel impossible to meet needs.

Ludin said many Afghans had saved in a bank account, “Now, they cannot access it. Afghan businessmen, for example, cannot make international transfers, which have produced high commodity prices in this country.”

Afghan analyst Mosque is worried Afghanistan can face a greater disaster if the Taliban cannot increase the economic situation, adding that they will find it difficult to govern and civil war can erupt.