conflict

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Guest post from ActionAid senior program coordinator Sally Henderson.

We are sitting on a raised wooden structure, surrounded by verdant forests, the kind which feels like it would grow on you if you stood still for long enough.

Surrounding us, are members from a group of community foresters who live in the village of Sambour Meas right-up on the border between Cambodia and Thailand in Oddar Maenchy Province.

They begin their presentation referring to large butcher paper sheets covered with the curves of Khmer letters. This community collects honey, leaves, mushrooms, rattan and berries amongst other non-timber products from the forests. They grow rice but the yields have been poor especially in the last few years due to duration and frequency of drought.

We are getting a bit hot and sweaty, but what they are about to tell us is so inspiring that we manage to forget about our state for a while.

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The issue of food security has been rapidly growing in importance over the last few years and has played an important role in many political events, such as the uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt. Even back in 2009, Hilary Clinton noted that there had been over sixty food riots in the preceding two years, arguing that ‘massive hunger poses a threat to the stability of governments, societies and borders’.

As the world’s population is tipped to reach 9 billion by 2050, and with food prices estimated to hit the highest point since 1990 , it is incredibly important to figure out how we can feed ourselves sustainably.

But importantly the question isn’t so much, how do we make enough food to feed the world (the Food and Agriculture Organisation estimates there’s enough food produced currently to feed 12 billion people), but rather how to ensure equale access to food, and the land required to produce it. 

A small Congolese child at a refugee camp holds a banana. When this photo was taken, disputes over land and resources were common and it was difficult to get adequate food supplies at refugee camps.

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Kola Tree Community School, in Western Area, Sierra Leone is part of ActionAid’s Access to Primary Education project in Sierra Leone.

This type of project is vital in Sierra Leone, which is still facing reconstruction challenges eight years after the civil war ended. Tens of thousands perished in the decade long war which saw as many as ten thousand child soldiers fighting in the conflict.

Kariah (left), Mary (second on left), Zainab (second on right) & Millicent (right) in the kindergarten at Kola Tree Community School

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World Humanitarian Day provides an opportunity for all people to celebrate the life saving efforts of the global humanitarian community (see official video below).

At a personal level it provides an opportunity to reflect and remember the dedication of my former colleagues who were killed and injured on that first World Humanitarian Day on 19 August 2003 when the UN Headquarters in Baghdad came under attack.

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It’s been a long time between posts which is largely due to me playing catch up as a result of 10 days in Hanoi attending a number of ActionAid Meetings focusing on Campaigning, then our Annual Country Directors Meeting followed by a quick Asia Regional Meeting.

That’s a lot of meeting and certainly a lot of talking so what’s with that? One of the big outcomes from Hanoi is a buy in from ActionAid’s senior management on how we can become an international campaigning power house. We are already a respected voice as a force for social change and we have some great policy work at country and international level but there is a renewed determination to take our campaigning work to the international level.

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Imagine being a young child and turning up to school to find it riddled with bullet holes, doors ripped from the hinges and your school work littering the playground.

This is what children like Wahid (pictured) faced last year after a 28 day war between Israel and Hamas. One year after the conflict, the children are struggling to regain a sense of normality.

Wahid picks up what is left of her project work from the rubble

Wahid picks up what is left of her project work from the rubble

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