Gusts of wind blew dust up off the ground as Ghulam Mohiddin and his wife Nazo walked towards the graveyard where all their children are buried.
They showed us the graves of the three boys they lost in the past two years – one-year-old Rahmat, seven-month-old Koatan and most recently, three-month-old Faisal Ahmad.
All three suffered from malnutrition, say Ghulam and Nazo.
Can you imagine how painful it's been for me to lose three children? One minute there's a baby in your arms, the next minute they are empty, says Nazo.
She conveys her hope, saying, I hope every day that angels would somehow put my babies back in our home.
As the couple reflects on their loss, and the dire conditions that led to their children's deaths, they reveal that they sometimes go without food altogether. In the Sheidaee settlement just outside Herat, they struggle to make ends meet by breaking walnut shells.
When Ghulam notes the heartbreaking image of his children crying out for food, he describes the feeling as if my body was erupting in flames.
The tragedy of the Mohiddin family is not unique, as reports of rising malnutrition rates abound in Afghanistan, pushed to an unprecedented crisis by economic collapse and political instability.
We started the year with the highest increase in child malnutrition ever recorded in Afghanistan. But things have got worse from there, warns John Aylieff, World Food Programme’s country director.
The UN's alarming statistics indicate that over three million children are now at risk, as the combined effects of food aid cuts and the Taliban's international isolation exacerbate the crisis. Without humanitarian intervention, families like Ghulam and Nazo's face an ever-worsening future.
In the Sheidaee graveyard, a stark reality emerges as reports show nearly two-thirds of the graves are for children. The poignant testimonies of families reflect a nation caught in a cycle of suffering, hunger, and despair.