<p>In the ruins of an Afghan village destroyed by years of war, a deepening economic crisis has left Javid with little hope of rebuilding his home.</p>.<p>For years, the strategically located Arzo, which lies along a main road entering the central city of Ghazni, was a battlefield.</p>.<p>Taliban insurgents fought government forces at five military outposts in and around the tiny village, often using civilian houses as staging posts.</p>.<p>"There was firing day and night and our house was in the middle," the 31-year-old Javid tells AFP.</p>.<p>He points to the tunnel the Taliban dug inside his ruined home this year to attack one of the army posts.</p>.<p>Javid and his family are still sheltering with relatives in another village until they can find enough money to rebuild their home.</p>.<p>He has nothing left, having already borrowed 160,000 Afghanis ($1,680) to revive his small shop.</p>.<p>"We need help from NGOs and the government, or my family can't come back," Javid says.</p>.<p>After more than a year of relentless fighting, the last inhabitants fled Arzo in June.</p>.<p>Two months later, Afghanistan fell to the Taliban and an economic crisis ensued with the international community largely freezing funding to the aid-dependent nation.</p>.<p>On top of that hardship, a devastating drought has sparked warnings of serious food shortages and a humanitarian disaster.</p>.<p>Rural areas such as Arzo bore the brunt of the two-decade conflict that saw Taliban insurgents face US, NATO and Afghan forces, with civilian casualties inflicted by both sides.</p>.<p>Families are slowly returning to the rubble of Arzo to try and rebuild.</p>.<p>Arzo villager Lailuma, 55, lost her daughter in the crossfire between Afghan forces and the insurgents.</p>.<p>Her husband survived a bullet to the head, but can no longer work.</p>.<p>The first time her house collapsed in the fighting, she rebuilt it. This time, she has no money.</p>.<p>Rafiullah, 65, a teacher at the local girls' school, lost his daughter, killed by a stray bullet.</p>.<p>She died two weeks before her wedding.</p>.<p>The school has resumed classes, and Rafiullah tries to rejoice at being reunited with his students, but still he mourns the loss of his child.</p>.<p>The blue gate of the school is riddled with dozens of bullet holes, the windows are broken, and the walls are scarred by artillery fire.</p>.<p>Between the spring of 2020 and the capture of the village, 40 civilians were killed.</p>.<p>To avoid more deaths, villagers collect unexploded ordnance and hide it in a vacant lot.</p>.<p>"We do it to protect the children," says village elder Abdul Bari Arzoi.</p>.<p>About 100 of the 800 families who lived in the mud houses at the centre of Arzo have not returned, says Arzoi.</p>.<p>The villagers also fear that mines remain buried in the fields on which they once depended, despite a recent effort by the Taliban to clear them.</p>.<p>Many men who tilled the fields have left to find work elsewhere. Livestock has also been lost.</p>.<p>"We cannot cultivate (crops) anymore or use our cattle, they are gone now -- no one remained to take care of them and they had no water," says Naqib Ahmad.</p>.<p>With no reserves for the winter, some try to find day labour in the nearby construction sites of Ghazni, or in Pakistan and Iran.</p>.<p>But many cling only to the hope of government support or international aid.</p>.<p>"We don't have any other way to survive," says Ahmad. "Many families have debts and they cannot repay them."</p>
<p>In the ruins of an Afghan village destroyed by years of war, a deepening economic crisis has left Javid with little hope of rebuilding his home.</p>.<p>For years, the strategically located Arzo, which lies along a main road entering the central city of Ghazni, was a battlefield.</p>.<p>Taliban insurgents fought government forces at five military outposts in and around the tiny village, often using civilian houses as staging posts.</p>.<p>"There was firing day and night and our house was in the middle," the 31-year-old Javid tells AFP.</p>.<p>He points to the tunnel the Taliban dug inside his ruined home this year to attack one of the army posts.</p>.<p>Javid and his family are still sheltering with relatives in another village until they can find enough money to rebuild their home.</p>.<p>He has nothing left, having already borrowed 160,000 Afghanis ($1,680) to revive his small shop.</p>.<p>"We need help from NGOs and the government, or my family can't come back," Javid says.</p>.<p>After more than a year of relentless fighting, the last inhabitants fled Arzo in June.</p>.<p>Two months later, Afghanistan fell to the Taliban and an economic crisis ensued with the international community largely freezing funding to the aid-dependent nation.</p>.<p>On top of that hardship, a devastating drought has sparked warnings of serious food shortages and a humanitarian disaster.</p>.<p>Rural areas such as Arzo bore the brunt of the two-decade conflict that saw Taliban insurgents face US, NATO and Afghan forces, with civilian casualties inflicted by both sides.</p>.<p>Families are slowly returning to the rubble of Arzo to try and rebuild.</p>.<p>Arzo villager Lailuma, 55, lost her daughter in the crossfire between Afghan forces and the insurgents.</p>.<p>Her husband survived a bullet to the head, but can no longer work.</p>.<p>The first time her house collapsed in the fighting, she rebuilt it. This time, she has no money.</p>.<p>Rafiullah, 65, a teacher at the local girls' school, lost his daughter, killed by a stray bullet.</p>.<p>She died two weeks before her wedding.</p>.<p>The school has resumed classes, and Rafiullah tries to rejoice at being reunited with his students, but still he mourns the loss of his child.</p>.<p>The blue gate of the school is riddled with dozens of bullet holes, the windows are broken, and the walls are scarred by artillery fire.</p>.<p>Between the spring of 2020 and the capture of the village, 40 civilians were killed.</p>.<p>To avoid more deaths, villagers collect unexploded ordnance and hide it in a vacant lot.</p>.<p>"We do it to protect the children," says village elder Abdul Bari Arzoi.</p>.<p>About 100 of the 800 families who lived in the mud houses at the centre of Arzo have not returned, says Arzoi.</p>.<p>The villagers also fear that mines remain buried in the fields on which they once depended, despite a recent effort by the Taliban to clear them.</p>.<p>Many men who tilled the fields have left to find work elsewhere. Livestock has also been lost.</p>.<p>"We cannot cultivate (crops) anymore or use our cattle, they are gone now -- no one remained to take care of them and they had no water," says Naqib Ahmad.</p>.<p>With no reserves for the winter, some try to find day labour in the nearby construction sites of Ghazni, or in Pakistan and Iran.</p>.<p>But many cling only to the hope of government support or international aid.</p>.<p>"We don't have any other way to survive," says Ahmad. "Many families have debts and they cannot repay them."</p>