The situation across Afghanistan remained extremely fluid and bolstered support for the humanitarian response inside Afghanistan was urgently needed. The vast majority of Afghans were not able to leave the country through regular channels, said the said UN officials. Shabia Mantoo, the spokesperson for the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR), said at a press briefing here on Friday that while widespread fighting had decreased since the takeover of the country by the Taliban on August 15, the full impact of the evolving situation was not yet clear. She said, some 200 UNHCR colleagues, both national and international, remained in Afghanistan. "UNHCR was working with 18 local non-government partners with some 900 staff throughout the country. At present, they were able to access all provinces and working in two-thirds of all districts," she added. Mantoo told before media that 550,000 people had been forcibly displaced inside Afghanistan this year, but there were also 2.9 million internally displaced persons from prior crises, and 2.6 million Afghans who had fled worldwide over the past decades. Tarik Jasarevic, spokesperson for the World Health Organization (WHO), said at the press briefing that WHO was also committed to staying in Afghanistan and delivering critical health services. According to the WHO spokesperson, most major health facilities in Afghanistan were functional, and health workers had been called to return to, or remain at their posts, including female health staff. Malaysia Govt: Ismail Sabri Yaakob appointed as Malaysian prime minister UK sanctions for seven Russians over poisoning Israel increasingly uses to fight against environmental offenders