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“When there was work, I made 300 afghanis ($3.75) per day.”

Now the family is surviving by sending their children to help harvest potatoes.

“The farmers give them some instead of salaries,” Mahram says. “That is all we have, with a bit of bread.”

“But in 10 days, the harvest will be over, and we will really be hungry. People will die.”

Like most people living in the region, the families are Hazara, a mainly Shia ethnic minority that has been marginalised and persecuted in Afghanistan for centuries.

The victory of the Taliban, made up of Sunni hardliners who see the community as heretics, has caused panic.

“It is very frightening,” says Amena, a 40-year-old mother of five children.

“But they have not come, and will probably not come all the way up to where we are.”

Amena parts the curtain at the entrance to her cave to reveal a platform carved into the rock topped with two cushions, a threadbare carpet, and a rickety wood-burning stove that has covered the ceiling with a thick layer of soot.

Near the doorway lies a bundle of potato branches, the family’s only fuel.

“Wood is too expensive,” she says.

There has never been electricity in the area, and collecting water requires three long trips down to the river in the valley each day.

The deputy chief of the local council, 25-year-old Saifullah Aria, says the situation is dire.

“Here, people are poor. Very poor,” he says.

“They usually make 100-200 afghanis ($1.10-2:10) a day, but for the past six weeks, with the Taliban, they’ve made nothing.”

He says most eat just one meal a day of potato and bread.

Aria adds that he has never seen NGOs reach the valley and that his pleas for help from the local Bamiyan authorities have gone unanswered.

“With the cold coming soon, the weakest here will die, that is for sure.”