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Making the World Safe for Humanitarian Aid

When armed conflict sends people fleeing, humanitarian aid workers rush in to provide emergency assistance and long-term support.

This World Humanitarian Day, ActionAid is partnering with the UN’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs to honour the thousands of aid workers who risk their lives everday to save others.

Sadly, it’s also a day to remember those that have been killed on the job. According to a UN-sponsored (PDF) report released in April, attacks on humanitarian personnel have tripled over the past decade. That spike has primarily been the result of increased kidnappings and roadside bombings on the battlefields of Afghanistan, Pakistan and Somalia.

These security challenges have far-reaching impacts on global aid efforts. Attacks on humanitarian personnel limit access to some of the world’s most vulnerable communities.

Zohra Bibi'’s husband, a school teacher was killed during the military operation against Taliban militants in Swat.

In Pakistan, ActionAid worked with Zohra Bibi—a mother of 10 whose husband was killed during an anti-Taliban military strike. At the height of the conflict, Zohra moved her entire family to a neighbouring province. They returned to find their home and crops destroyed. ActionAid worked with a Pakistani relief agency to help Zohra get new livestock to help feed her family.

Despite the apparent risks in places like Zohra’s home in the Swat Valley, humanitarian organisations continue to send teams into the world’s most precarious security environments. To do that, aid groups are investing heavily in security measures to protect their staff.

Hiring armed security officers and putting up barriers, however, can cut aid workers off from the very communities they are trying to protect. Working with armed guards or the military to keep personnel safe in the field can also blur the lines between humanitarian aid and gun-barrel diplomacy—as seen with the militarisation of aid to Afghanistan. And that can create more instability.

So, how can the aid community get out of this Catch-22?

Last week, the International Committee of the Red Cross launched a four-year-long campaign to end the mounting violence against aid personnel.

The Red Cross and Red Crescent have put education at the heart of their global campaign to end violence against health care workers. In the field, they distribute information on international humanitarian law to military personnel, government officials and non-state opposition groups. They also negotiate safe zones, and protect field hospitals with blast-proof materials and protective emblems.

But education alone is not enough. The Geneva Conventions’ protection of health care workers and those they care for continue to be ignored. Over the next few years, the Red Cross and Red Crescent plan to work with governments, NGOs and members of the health care community to develop practical solutions for protecting health care personnel, and beef up international humanitarian law to stop the targeting of aid workers.

The UN has also developed its own best-practice recommendations for gaining and maintaining access. The UN believes that building support among local communities and hiring local residents are the keys to success in volatile environments. They also recommend low-profile approaches, which protect aid operations from becoming easy targets.

Protecting aid workers will require changing global attitudes towards humanitarian aid. It will not be an easy task, but, with the continuing need for humanitarian relief in war zones across the globe, it is a necessary one.

By the UN’s count, the East African drought has already left 2 million infants malnourished and 30,000 people dead. And without much-needed attention from the international community, the crisis is only getting worse.

In a new report, the UN increased its estimate of the number of people currently at risk of starvation in East Africa to 13 million, from nine million just two weeks ago.

In Isiolo, an elder farmer stands in a field that hasn’t produced since 1997 because of drought. (Frederic Courbet/Panos Picures/ActionAid) Read the rest of this entry »

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The United Nations officially declared a famine in parts of Somalia Wednesday amid the worst drought in east Africa in more than 50 years.

Under the UN’s five-stage classification system, the “famine” designation means that at least two people per 10,000 are dying everyday and there are less than 7.5 litres of water available per person per day.

In a region already hit hard by rising global food prices, the African drought has devastated domestic farming and intensified price spikes. According to the BBC, the drought has already affected more than 10 million people across the Horn of Africa, and has sent tens of thousands of Somalis fleeing to neighbouring Kenya and Ethiopia.

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With almost  billion people going to bed hungry each night, the question of how we tackle hunger is one of the biggest facing the so-called aid and development community.

But what’s the answer?

At the 2009 G8 meeting in Italy, a group of the world’s richest nations pledged $22 billion in agricultural aid to help fight hunger and curb the threat of continuing food crises. These promises were very welcome, but how that money is spent is all important.

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Meet Polly. She’s a smallholder farmer from Uganda working to promote sustainable agriculture and the status of women farmers in her country.

Next week, ActionAid Australia will welcome Polly for a two-week speaking tour for rural communities across New South Wales and Victoria.

Polly is scheduled to arrive in Sydney on 18 June, and will travel to Orange, Bellingen and Armidale before finishing her trip in Melbourne (no public events) at the end of the month. Read the rest of this entry »

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