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Africa: Humanitarian Double Standard

AfricaFocus Bulletin
Nov 20, 2003 (031120)
(Reposted from sources cited below)

Editor's Note

"But let me be clear: the aid we give them is not charity, it is their right. ... donors and citizens who can help have not only a moral responsibility to provide emergency and life-sustaining assistance, but an obligation to do so under international humanitarian and human rights law." - UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan

The UN this week launched its consolidated humanitarian appeal for $3 billion for 2004, for 21 crises around the world, including 17 in Africa. However, the UN has received commitments to date for only two-thirds of the 2003 appeal for $5.1 billion. Even that figure is misleading, noted UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan: 91 percent of the $2.2 billion requested for Iraq for 2003 is funded, while Burundi has only received 28 percent of the amount sought and Liberia 24 percent.

This issue of AfricaFocus Bulletin includes selected information and links from the UN on this latest appeal.

For additional information, see http://www.un.org/depts/ocha/cap Stories from individuals affected by these crises are at: http://www.un.org/depts/ocha/cap/voices.html

For an additional news report, stressing the need for more emphasis on transition from relief to development:
http://allafrica.com/stories/200311190002.html

Earlier this year, World Food Program director James Morris also spoke on the international double standard on humanitarian relief. See http://www.africaaction.org/docs03/food0304.htm

++++++++++++++++++++++end editor's note+++++++++++++++++++++++

Annan launches UN's 2004 humanitarian appeal for $3 billion

18 November, 2003

http://www.un.org/News

Declaring "no one should die because they lack food and medicine that are available in surplus elsewhere," Secretary-General Kofi Annan today launched the 2004 annual Consolidated Appeal on behalf of United Nations humanitarian agencies, calling for $3 billion to help 45 million people in 21 countries.

"Let us be clear: the aid we give them is not charity, it is their right," Mr. Annan told a ceremony at UN Headquarters in New York. He stressed that most of the proposed beneficiaries were children, women and the elderly struggling to survive displacement, loss and severe disruption to their lives in wars, conflicts and natural disasters.

"Victims of natural and man-made disasters have a right to the fulfilment of their basic needs. And donors and citizens who can help have not only a moral responsibility to provide emergency and life-sustaining assistance, but an obligation to do so under international humanitarian and human rights law," he added.

Noting that the $3 billion sought amounted to "little more than $3 per person in donor countries the cost of a magazine or two cups of coffee," Mr. Annan declared: "With that amount we will help save lives in 21 of the world's most serious crises from Chechnya (Russian Federation) to the Democratic People's Republic of Korea and many countries and regions in Africa."

He also stressed the security aspect of the appeal for wealthy nations. "A world where, amid increasing global prosperity, millions still live in desperate conditions, will not be a world at peace," he said. "Indeed timely aid to those who need it most can do much to help prevent conflict."

He noted that only 66 per cent of the $3 billion sought in the current 2003 appeal had so far been received and that even that figure was misleading because funding levels remained uneven 91 per cent of the amount requested for Iraq, a third of the total, having been funded while Burundi only received 28 per cent of the amount sought and Liberia 24 per cent.

The annual appeal is put together by the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) and is a product of the Consolidated Appeals Process (CAP), a mechanism created a decade ago by the UN General Assembly to plan a common humanitarian strategy and maximize resources.

This year's campaign is being held under the theme "Hear Our Voices," with some of the beneficiaries telling their own stories. "We are trying to put the focus back on the people we are working for," said a spokesperson for OCHA, Stephanie Bunker.

Moderating today's event, the UN's Emergency Relief Coordinator and Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs, Jan Egeland, said the appeal needed generous funding from more States and donors since funding levels were remaining stagnant despite increasing needs.

Mark Malloch Brown, Administrator of the UN Development Programme (UNDP), said the launch was not about asking for permanent welfare checks. Rather, it was about strategically moving countries from relief to rehabilitation and reconstruction.

For his part, Ambassador Ismael Abraao Gaspar Martins of Angola, speaking in his capacity as President of the Security Council for November, said that without the CAP, the conditions of people living in conflict zones would be much worse. His own country had benefited greatly from the CAP, both during and after its bitter conflict. It had helped people regain control of their lives and had put them on the path towards self-sufficiency, he added.

The crises included in this year's appeal are: Angola, Burundi, Chechnya and Neighbouring Republics (Russian Federation), Central African Republic, C�te d'Ivoire (plus 3 Burkina Faso, Ghana and Mali), the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Eritrea, the Great Lakes Region, Guinea, Liberia, the occupied Palestinian territory, Sierra Leone, Somalia, the southern Africa region, the Sudan, Tajikistan, Tanzania, Uganda, West Africa and Zimbabwe.

For Media enquires:

Stephanie Bunker OCHA New York: Tel: +1-917-367-51-26; Mobile: +1-917-892-1679; Email: [email protected]

Andrew Lawday OCHA Geneva: Tel: +41-22-917-1817; Mobile: +41-22-79-477-0803; Email: [email protected]


New York, 18 November 2003 -

Secretary-General's 2004 Humanitarian Appeal Address

Thank you very much Mr. Chairman, Mr. President [of the Security Council, Ambassador Gaspar Martins], Excellencies, Ladies and Gentlemen and dear Friends,

It is a pleasure to be with you today to launch this annual Appeal on behalf of the humanitarian agencies of the United Nations, and non-governmental and Red Cross partner organizations. We are appealing to donors to provide $3 billion for 21 countries.

Why? Because 45 million civilians urgently need humanitarian assistance. They are struggling to survive displacement, loss, and severe disruption to their lives in the world's wars, conflicts and natural disasters. These 45 million are not a statistic, but real people with real needs. Most of them are children, women and the elderly.

What they hope for and need is not our pity, but our support. They have been forced to flee their homes and their communities, and have lost almost everything they owned. But they are not waiting helplessly for aid. And they are not waiting for us to take care of all their needs. Most of them are working hard, doing anything they can to survive, drawing on all their capacities and resources to recover and resume a normal life.

We are here today to show our solidarity with them. We must support them in their struggle. We must help them survive until they can rebuild their communities and care more completely for themselves.

But let me be clear: the aid we give them is not charity, it is their right. Victims of natural and man-made disasters have the right to the fulfillment of their basic needs. And donors and citizens who can help have not only a moral responsibility to provide emergency and life-sustaining assistance, but an obligation to do so under international humanitarian and human rights law.

I am sure that every one of us would expect such assistance, and consider it our right if we were in a dire situation like the people to whom I lend my voice today.

No one should die because they lack food and medicines that are available in surplus elsewhere.

As we have seen time and again, people respond generously when they see on their television screens a hungry child, a dying mother, a desperate father. But let us not forget that many of the world's most serious crises happen far from the cameras, and that even when a crisis or conflict is over, countries continue to need support during the critical transition period leading to peace and development.

I know that the world's wealthy nations understand their responsibility to help people in need and uphold people's rights. They rightly see the assistance they provide as a simultaneous investment in security. A world where, amid increasing global prosperity, millions still live in desperate conditions, will not be a world at peace. Indeed, timely aid to those who need it most can do much to help prevent conflict.

Yet, despite generous contributions, the financing of humanitarian aid too often remains inadequate and unpredictable. The Consolidated Appeals for the current year so far received only 66 per cent of the amount required. And this figure itself is misleading. It is misleading as funding levels remain uneven. While the amount requested for Iraq, for example, which represents more than one third of the total Appeals, was 91 per cent funded, Burundi, for instance, received only 28 per cent and Liberia, 24 per cent.

We must do better, and we must forget no one who depends on us for help and for hope. If we were able to collect nearly $2 billion dollars for Iraq alone, surely we can raise the $3 billion we are asking for the rest of the world next year. $3 billion for the rest of the world. We have raised $2 billion for Iraq alone. That is the equivalent of little more than $3 per person in donor countries the cost of a magazine or two cups of coffee. With that amount we will help save lives in 21 of the world's most serious crises from Chechnya (Russian Federation) to the Democratic People's Republic of Korea and many countries and regions in Africa.

The Consolidated Appeals Process (CAP) is designed not only to alleviate immediate suffering, but also to identify the deeper and longer-term needs. Of course, it cannot and does not provide solutions to the crises themselves. We all need to make greater efforts to address the underlying causes of these crises, and to prevent other crises before it is too late.

Together, we can make a difference. So, I ask you to hear the voices of the victims of these crises, wherever and whoever they may be, and to fulfil your responsibility towards them by responding swiftly and generously to our appeals. Let us give them a helping hand in their efforts to help themselves. Thank you very much.


U.N. Aid Coordinators For Africa Outline Needs Of 2004 Appeal


By Vince Morkri, U.N. Wire

http://www.unwire.org

November 19, 2003

WASHINGTON Ethiopia was able to avoid a "major humanitarian disaster" this year because of the efforts of an international food-aid drive, but up to 12.6 million people there remain at risk due to the effects of drought or inconsistent rains, the country's U.N. humanitarian coordinator said yesterday.

Samuel Nyambi, who spearheads a 21-member group of humanitarian organizations in Ethiopia, said 13.2 million Ethiopians, out of a population of 70 million, received food aid last year to counter the effects of a devastating drought, with the United States having contributed more than half of that amount.

"In the face of this challenge, the response of the international community and donors has been a godsend a response which has allowed us to avert a major disaster."

Nyambi said that although the worst effects of the drought have abated, at least 10 million Ethiopians will need food assistance next year. He also said funding requirements of $40 million for nonfood needs mostly water and irrigation programs has gone unmet this year, with the exception of a malaria-control program.

A joint program by aid agencies and the government intended to address Ethiopia's chronic food needs for the next five years will be launched Dec 1, although the impact of the program will be gradual, he said.

He said the country will try to break its cycle of dependency with the help of the program, but that given current conditions, "almost 50 cents of every [aid] dollar goes into emergencies and less and less is going to investing in development."

Nyambi and the U.N. humanitarian coordinators for Liberia and Eritrea were visiting Washington to promote the 2004 U.N. Consolidated Interagency Appeals. They spoke at a luncheon to help launch the campaign.

The humanitarian coordinator for Liberia, Abou Moussa, said the war-torn country faces a malnutrition rate of 35 percent, and that 300,000 people who fled the capital, Monrovia, are living without electricity and running water.

He said $157 million is needed next year to meet the needs of 1.7 million Liberians, including 750,000 schoolchildren, 500,000 internal refugees, 38,000 combatants and their dependents and 15,000 child soldiers and children associated with the fighting forces.

With the transitional government of Chairman Gyude Bryant now in place, having taken over from the ousted regime of President Charles Taylor, the outlook for the economy has improved, although Liberians "will have to rely on handouts for a long time," Moussa said.

"What I think is important now is how the new government is doing business," he said. "They have started to look at the issue of how to revive the economy."

One positive sign is that government workers are being paid their salaries this month for the first time in two years, he said. He also said U.N. peacekeeping troops have helped make it possible for aid agencies "to get access to some parts of the country so we can determine what we need to do to start helping the people with food and health programs and other requirements."

Simon Nhongo, the U.N. humanitarian coordinator for Eritrea, said 1.7 million of Eritrea's nearly 3.6 million people need food aid. "The greater part of the humanitarian problem derives from drought," he said. "The winter rains and spring rains were not sufficient; the summer rains that came from about June to September were short and poorly distributed, and there was a lack of quality seed. Then, to add to that, you look at the shortage of labor oxen as well as agriculture implements and machinery."

He said the rains that did come were so large as to damage crops, and that the country also suffered from an infestation of grasshoppers. Whereas the average crop output is 187,000 metric tons, he said, last year just 54,000 metric tons were produced. This year's forecast is for 100,000 metric tons.

The focus for aid agencies in Eritrea, he said, "will be on saving lives and preventing malnutrition from deteriorating further; providing assistance to and supporting the safety, protection and return of refugees mostly from Sudan; strengthening coping mechanisms in traditional practices, and strengthening the capacity of the government, U.N. agencies and other partners to better target the use of those resources to the most vulnerable households."

The country needs about $148 million in aid for 2004, with two-thirds of that needed for food aid, he said.

The 2004 U.N. consolidated appeal is targeting $3 billion in donor funds to aid 45 million people in 21 countries and regions. During last year's drive, the United Nations was able to fulfill 66 percent of its goal of $5.1 billion in donations.

[U.N. Wire Copyright 2003 by National Journal Group Inc. - re-use according to UN Wire guidelines]


Sample summary of UN humanitarian appeal

[For this and other summaries, including details of financial commitments by donors, see http://www.reliefweb.int]

Consolidated Appeals Process (CAP): Humanitarian Appeal 2004 for the Great Lakes Region and Central Africa

November 18, 2003

SUMMARY

Displacement, drought, disease

While prospects for peace in the Great Lakes region are promising, the region's 127 million people are struggling to cope with raging conflicts, repeated and continued displacement, drought and disease, including the HIV/AIDS pandemic.

People are not feeling political gains translated into improvements in their daily lives.

The long-running crisis in the Great Lakes region has resulted in a huge number of deaths, great suffering and hardship, severe devastation, major population displacement, widespread criminality and arbitrary violence.

The region is home to some 5 million of the world's 25 million internally displaced persons. Most live in camps, which are congested, unhygienic and lack basic services. Armed attacks on these camps are frequent.

Children are primary victims in the present situation. Thousands in the region have been forcefully recruited, abducted, and turned into killers. Many armies are predominantly comprised of children.

Women and girls are particularly vulnerable in a region where simple daily chores of food preparation or gardening can imperil their lives, and expose them risk of sexual violence. Rape increasingly is used as a weapon of war, to torture and subjugate women and tear apart families.

All people in the region suffer the impact of the HIV/AIDS pandemic. It is thought to have one of the highest prevalence rates in Africa. In Burundi, DRC, Rwanda, Tanzania and Uganda, there are more than 4 million persons living with HIV AIDS and 3,120,000 AIDS orphans. Transmission increases dramatically in conflict situations.

Food insecurity, ever a problem, is exacerbated by the continued conflict, frequent displacement and denied access.

Chronic poverty and misery now characterize daily life for populations increasingly immune to horror. Thousands are being forced into high-risk occupations, as 'voluntary' conscripts, prostitutes or slave labourers.

Human rights abuses are almost routine. Sexual violence, abduction, indiscriminate attacks and murder, are everyday events.

Aid, protection, peace

The Strategy designed by humanitarian actors in the region for 2004 will place particular focus on:

  • Reaching IDPs; accessing and assisting IDPs currently not assisted and expanding the scope of available aid
  • Protection of children; identifying and bringing to light violence committed against children, preventing it whenever and wherever possible
  • Preventing sexual violence; caring for victims and advocating to bring perpetrators to account
  • Peace and demobilization; integrating humanitarian principles in all aspects of conflict resolution, demobilization, disarmament and reintegration

Agencies and their partners will continue to develop, enhance and promote complementarity among regional stakeholders. Although not all stakeholders have included projects in the Appeal, all have resolved to work together to meet needs in a coordinated and principled manner.

Request

The Great Lakes Regional Appeal is for US$ 121,295,549.


AfricaFocus Bulletin is a free independent electronic publication providing reposted commentary and analysis on African issues, with a particular focus on U.S. and international policies. AfricaFocus Bulletin is edited by William Minter.

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