For only the second time in his life, Afghan farmer Murad Khan Ishaqzai has been forced to leave the home where he was born 80 years ago -- not by war but the worst drought in living memory.
Ishaqzai, wizened and weather-beaten by decades of working in his wheat field, is one of more than 250,000 people in western Afghanistan displaced by the months-long dry spell that has devastated crops, livestock and water supplies.
Beaten by the inhospitable conditions, many families in rural areas decided to travel hundreds of kilometres in the back of rented trucks through districts contested by Taliban fighters and government forces to reach the city of Herat.
There, they set up pitiful, makeshift tents on the rocky outskirts of the provincial capital.
"The farms were destroyed, our livestock perished, and we left our donkeys in the desert because we couldn't feed them any more," said Ishaqzai, who brought his family from Ghormach district in Badghis, one of the hardest-hit provinces in the country.
Conditions are miserable in the camps that have mushroomed across the unforgiving landscape in recent months as above-average temperatures and intense fighting forced more people to abandon their villages and livelihoods.
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Dust whipped up by the relentless wind has become a second skin for camp dwellers.
Children have little to play with except rocks -- when they are not filling their family's jugs with water delivered by trucks, begging or collecting rubbish in the city.
Men who used to proudly support their families now sit around with nothing to do, while their wives squat on the ground making bread -- the only food many of them can afford to eat.
"If I could have stayed there (in Badghis) I wouldn't have come here, even if you gave me all of Herat city," Ishaqzai said, a pristine white turban wrapped around his head.
A drought 15 years ago temporarily forced Ishaqzai and his family from their home, but this one is "the worst in my life", he said.
The rising number of displaced families has overwhelmed Afghan officials and foreign aid groups, which are struggling to meet demand for food, shelter and health services months after the crisis began.
As winter approaches, UN Humanitarian Coordinator in Afghanistan Toby Lanzer said more international funding was urgently needed.
"Over 5.5 million people are in need of emergency relief (due to drought and conflict)," Lanzer told reporters in New York last month.
"If we do not engage more on the short-term emergency relief requirements, the development gains that we have achieved over the past years... could be lost."
"We didn't care about the war as it's been going on for years. We were happy, busy farming but because of the drought our children were starving."
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