SOCIETY — June 14, 2026

Mothers in Afghanistan Face Poverty, Limited Healthcare and Violence on Mother's Day

Many mothers report struggling to meet basic family needs due to rising poverty and unemployment, with limited access to healthcare and support services.

The Ehtebar Desk — originates with Hasht-e Subh2 min read

Mothers in Afghanistan Face Poverty, Limited Healthcare and Violence on Mother's Day
Image courtesy Hasht-e Subh

June 14 is observed as Mother's Day in Afghanistan. Many mothers across the country are contending with severe economic hardship, limited access to healthcare, domestic violence and psychological pressure.

Poverty and unemployment have turned the provision of basic family needs into a daily struggle. These conditions affect the capacity of mothers to sustain their households amid ongoing economic difficulties.

Access to health services remains restricted. Insufficient medical facilities and high costs prevent many mothers from obtaining necessary care.

Domestic violence and psychological pressures affect some mothers due to difficult living conditions. Available support for those experiencing these problems is often inadequate.

International institutions have expressed concern about the situation of women and mothers in Afghanistan. The observance of Mother's Day draws attention to these interconnected challenges of deprivation and hardship.

Read the original reporting at Hasht-e Subh

Reliability assessment

Single source only; all claims rely on anonymous interviews with unnamed mothers and vague references to unnamed international institutions without specific names, dates, locations, or verifiable details

The source language mixes facts with framing or advocacy wording. Hasht-e Subh: "one of the most vulnerable segments of society", "heavy pressure on families", "serious challenges" - these phrases frame the mothers' situation with emotional and advocacy-oriented language emphasizing victimhood and systemic failure.

Independent web corroboration

An independent web search turned up no separate corroborating reports. Treat the account as single-sourced until more outlets pick it up.

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Filed under

SocietyMother's Day, Afghan Mothers, Poverty, Domestic Violence, Healthcare Access

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