Get News & Views Updates
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
The Silent Humanitarian Crises Beyond East Africa
The international response to the East African crisis is far short of urgent needs, yet the extreme deprivation being reported is only the tip of the iceberg.
The unfolding crisis in the Horn of Africa is yet another tragedy that reflects the dysfunction and injustice inherent in the structures of the world economy. Although the factors that are currently causing widespread hunger and deprivation across a large part of the region include the worst drought for 60 years, escalating food prices and continued regional conflict, the problem is largely man-made and entirely preventable if sufficient resources are redistributed to all people in need.
Displaced Somalis wait to collect food aid at a distribution point in the capital Mogadishu. (Photograph: Feisal Omar/Reuters)
Around 10.7 million people already need urgent humanitarian assistance, while many thousands are fleeing a devastated Somalia each day to take refuge in makeshift camps across Ethiopia and Kenya. The United Nations has now officially declared two regions of southern Somalia to be in famine - a situation in which at least 20 percent of households face a complete lack of food and other basic necessities, and starvation, death and destitution are evident. As the Famine Early Warning Systems Network makes clear, the currently inadequate levels of humanitarian response are likely to see famine spread across all eight regions of southern Somalia within two months and could lead to "total livelihood/social collapse".
With food insecurity in the East African region remaining an ongoing concern for decades, many humanitarian agencies have been trying to draw attention to a potential famine in these countries for some time. The UN made an appeal for $500m in 2010 to assist with food security, but managed to secure only half from donors. Consequently, hunger levels have rocketed over recent months, and in some areas the number of young children suffering malnutrition is now three times the normal emergency level. At least half a million children risk death if immediate help does not reach them, according to the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF).
The humanitarian coordinator for Somalia has also described the lack of resources as alarming, with insufficient donations of food, clean water, shelter and health services to save the lives of hundreds of thousands of Somalis in desperate need. The underlying problem is repeated by various aid organisations: that the international response is not commensurate with the urgent requirements of those affected by the humanitarian catastrophe, and there is a lack of international support to address the deep-seated causes of the crisis or to mitigate future crises.
Yet the extreme deprivation being widely reported across East African is just the tip of the iceberg. Needless impoverishment and death is an ongoing catastrophe that unfolds daily, largely without any attention from the world's media or the public. At least 41,000 people in the developing world continue to die each day from easily preventable diseases that barely occur in high-income countries, such as diarrhoea, malaria or nutritional deficiencies. Despite the scale of these preventable deaths - amounting to 15 million lives lost each year, half of which affect young children before their fifth birthday - there is no official recognition that such extreme deprivation should also be considered a humanitarian catastrophe and treated accordingly.
These shameful mortality rates occur as a result of the ongoing silent disaster of world poverty, which receives a similarly inadequate international response to the periodic famines or food crises in countries like Somalia. For over a decade, international efforts to reduce poverty have centred around the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), a set of globally agreed targets that are set to expire in 2015. Although the MDGs have done much to focus attention on global poverty, they are widely considered an insufficient and superficial approach to economic development and saving lives.
A deadly lack of ambition
The politically sensitive principles of equity and distributive justice that featured in the original Millennium Declaration have gradually faded from the official development discourse, accompanied by a deadly lack of ambition. Even if the MDG goal on halving rates of poverty is met, a staggering 882 million people will still be living in absolute poverty in 2015. In effect, the MDG's focus on merely reducing over time the number of people living below the threshold of human survival tacitly accepts the continuance of poverty-related deaths each day. Similarly, goals four and five commit to reduce maternal mortality by only three quarters by 2015, and under-five child mortality by two-thirds, which accepts not only a high number of preventable maternal and child deaths remaining at the end of the MDG period, but also many millions of such needless deaths in the interim.
In an interdependent and globalised world, there can be no meaningful process of development whilst so many people living in poverty die prematurely and unnecessarily. The impact on families, communities and economies are devastating, and preventing these deaths is an urgent moral necessity. Even in the crudest economic calculations, putting an end to avoidable deaths would amount to a significant investment in human capital, as healthy individuals whose basic needs are secured are far more likely to contribute to the growth of communities and nations. It is objectionable from any social, moral or economic viewpoint that sufficient resources are not immediately made available to address the crises of extreme deprivation, especially in its most acute manifestation well before the situation degenerates into a full-blown famine.
International efforts to address the life-threatening poverty of millions of people in the poorest countries must aim far higher and provide much more than the current insufficient, voluntary and often conditional donations of overseas aid and disaster assistance. A massively upscaled redistribution of resources from North to South is essential to avert humanitarian disasters and prevent extreme deprivation and poverty-related deaths. Given the scale of these related crises, an international program of emergency relief must become the highest priority of world governments, followed by assistance for developing countries to secure ongoing state-provided welfare and essential services for all their citizens. Efforts to improve the redistribution of wealth nationally through the development of local industries, better taxation and the provision of comprehensive social protection for all people should become the new focus of international development policy.
Central to this transformation of development is the principle of sharing, which embodies universally accepted ethical values that reflect our common humanity. Aligning the international policy discourse more closely to our shared moral obligations can help redeem decades of unjust economic and social policy, prevent future famines and help manifest an inclusive vision of progress and development. In the simplest economic terms, sharing points to the need for a redistribution of wealth from rich to poor, and a shift in power relations from financial and commercial interests to the world's majority population. The East African crisis presents another opportunity for civil society to demand that wealth and resources are shared more equitably across the world, and that policy-makers prioritise the complete eradication of poverty above all other concerns.
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...




10 Comments so far
Show AllHow are these two helping the situation ... somebody must be paying them to be lobbyists for the "famine" industry. Relief for famine victims is the end result of bad planning by organisations including the UN, the World Bank, the USAID .... If you want good information, go to the websites of organisations that know the situation and have decades of experience working with the victims..
Relief must go hand in hand with rehabilitation and development. Relief turns farmers and pastoralists into permanent victims.Rehabilitation provides seeds to replace the "seed corn" that was eaten before heading off to the feeding station.
Development is working to introduce drought tolerant varieties, to build better grain storage where half the crop is not lost every year, to educate the farmers to microterrace and use integrated pest management (IPM). Common Dreams should be highlighting people doing real work (ie IRC, Doctors without Borders, Save the Children, OXFAM) rather than promoting well-meaning "experts" from the relief cocktail circuit. And all of the good organisations have real and good stories to share with the CD readers .
We are approaching a world moment, apart from which the business of this world's people will be that of saving lives.
There is not a socialist Country on Earth. Per the Socialist Party website. Something that has a chance of working needs to be done. I'm gonna be blasted out of the water for this, but birth numbers must be cut. It's cruel to have children you can't feed.
You're absolutely right. But, everyone needs a mini-me to be whole. Or several. We in the west should know better by now. But more bodies mean more profits for our masters. Cars, clothing, iPhones, lawnmowers, Snuggies, not to mention raw, warm bodies that will readily travel out to the furtherest reaches of our empire to kill and destroy. More people makes the world go 'round. Their world.
When I was growing up I was told to eat my food because there were starving children in the world.
And decades later they're still starving.
When I read this it reminds me of what we are complaining about here on CD about the corp takeover of our government and the effects hitting the most vulnerable the hardest. Why are we finding it so difficult to see that this has been happening on a global scale for such a long time by one empire or another? These are the victims, just as we are now finding ourselves to be! However, as LELAND has commented we are at a point in this world where the global destruction of the environment and its polical-economy leaves us too few options to alleviate all the impending suffering, including our own.
Peace!
If Hedge Fund transactions were taxed a penny or so a pop, and that money went into initiatives designed to help these people farm or find ways to retain grain... it would begin to mitigate the karma of the Disaster Capitalists and their reign of fiscal terror... but Earth Mother is also acting in ways that will send many off of the earth plane sooner, rather than later.
Note the article at this link: globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=25725
Entitled: Somalia: The Real Causes of Famine - by Michel Chossudovsky
Economic and social chaos resulting from IMF "economic medicine" had set the stage for the launching of a US sponsored "civil war". This is how an entire country with a rich history of commerce and economic development, was transformed into a territory of chaos, famine and death.
I have been dying to go to East Africa to help, but can't find any cheap flights no matter how much I look. Does anyone know the best time of year to go? http://farecompa.re/pFEbPA