SOCIETY — June 17, 2026
UN Official Warns Taliban Restrictions Worsen Maternal Mortality in Afghanistan
Olga Cheryko of OCHA highlighted risks to healthcare access including at a key neonatal facility in Bamyan province while referencing UNICEF projections of a major shortfall in female health workers by 2030.
The Ehtebar Desk — originates with Afghanistan International — corroborated by Khaama Press — 2 min read

A senior United Nations humanitarian official has warned that restrictions imposed by the Taliban on women and girls are worsening Afghanistan's already high maternal mortality rate.
Olga Cheryko of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said the measures further limit humanitarian responses and women's access to life-saving healthcare services. She highlighted a hospital in Bamyan province operating the region's only neonatal intensive care unit, which relies on many female health and aid workers.
Afghanistan has one of the world's highest maternal mortality rates at approximately 600 deaths per 100,000 births. Cheryko noted that the Taliban's policies since returning to power have reduced the presence of women as health workers, creating challenges for female patients seeking medical services.
UNICEF previously cautioned that continued restrictions could lead to a shortage of 25,000 female teachers and health workers by 2030.
Read the original reporting at Afghanistan International →
Reliability assessment
Named UN official Olga Cheryko (OCHA) is directly quoted on-record by two outlets regarding Taliban restrictions and maternal health impacts; this constitutes verifiable attribution of the statement itself.
The source language mixes facts with framing or advocacy wording. Afghanistan International: "serious concern", "growing concerns", "serious challenges" - these phrases frame the restrictions negatively and emphasize harm and crisis without neutral attribution.
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.
Across the newsrooms
Where reports agree
- High maternal mortality rate in Afghanistan
- Negative impact of Taliban restrictions on women and girls' access to healthcare and humanitarian services
- Importance of female health workers for reducing maternal deaths
Filed by 2 outlets
Afghanistan International
Originating
Framed
Framed
Khaama Press
Framed
Framed
Filed under
Society — Taliban, Women's rights, Maternal mortality, OCHA, UNICEF
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