When, in March 2015, delegates from the Middle East met in Amman for their regional consultations round in preparation for the two-day World Humanitarian Summit which opened in Istanbul today, most likely what they had in mind is the fact that their region was – and still is – the dramatic set of “the mother of all humanitarian crises.” The time to act is now; tomorrow may be too late.
In March 2016, a mother walks through misty weather with her two sons along train tracks in Idomeni, Greece. Credit: ©UNICEF/UN012794/Georgie
Cedric Prakash
The World Humanitarian Summit(WHS), May 23rd & 24th 2016 in Istanbul, Turkey is finally underway!
The two-day event convened by the UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon is focused around his call that humanity – people’s safety, dignity and the right to thrive – be placed at the heart of global decision-making. Three major goals have been envisaged for the Summit:
To re-inspire and reinvigorate a commitment to humanity and to the universality of humanitarian principles,
To initiate a set of concrete actions and commitments aimed at enabling countries and communities to better prepare for and respond to crises, and be resilient to shocks,
To share best practices which can help save lives around the world, put affected people at the centre of humanitarian action, and alleviate suffering.
In order to deliver for humanity, stakeholders must act immediately on five core responsibilities:
- To prevent and end conflict,
- To respect rules of war,
- To leave no one behind,
- To work differently to end need,
- To invest in humanity.
Besides two other responsibilities are also highlighted:
- Catalyse action for gender equality;
- Respond to disasters and climate change.
Both the goals and the core responsibilities are certainly laudable and could go a long away to help bring ‘humanity’ back centre-stage in a world that so desperately cries out for it! The WHS, a first-of-its-kind, was expected to bring together heads of state and government and key decision-makers from across the globe.
On the eve of the Summit however, in a lead ‘The New York Times’ (May 21, 2016) states: “Most of the world’s most powerful leaders – those whose soldiers and diplomats can end wars and hold accountable those who violate international humanitarian law – are not going.”
Angela Merkel, the Chancellor of Germany is the only G-7 leader who is expected to be present. The absence of world leaders at this important summit is a sad commentary of how far an immediate global response will actually go in the wake of the greatest humanitarian crisis that has gripped the world today!
It is true however, that the WHS will bring together more than six thousand participants representing more than 125 countries, the UN agencies and the whole spectrum of civil society organisations which are engaged in humanitarian issues. It will be a great opportunity not merely to exchange notes, ‘sell’ the good work being done – but more than ever to see in what ways an immediate, collaborative, pragmatic and sustainable response is agreed upon – and which can be implemented without delay.
Many are skeptical if this will actually happen. A few weeks ago one of the leading humanitarian INGOs, Medicins Sans Frontieres (MSF) (Doctors without Borders) pulled out of the WHS. MSF stated:“As shocking violations of international humanitarian law and refugee rights continue on a daily basis, WHS participants will be pressed to a consensus on non-specific, good intentions to ‘uphold norms’ and ‘end needs’. The summit has become a fig-leaf of good intentions, allowing these systematic violations, by states above all, to be ignored. We no longer have any hope that the WHS will address the weaknesses in humanitarian action and emergency response, particularly in conflict areas or epidemic situations."
Point taken. But those who gather in Istanbul must ensure that the WHS is no ‘fig-leaf of good intentions’ and must have the courage to ask and answer difficult questions, like:
- Will the so-called developed nations CLOSE DOWN immediately their arms and ammunitions industry?
- Will developing nations stop increasing their spending on ‘Defence and Military warfare’?
- Will nations stop the juggernaut of fascism, fundamentalism, fanaticism and misplaced ‘patriotism’ which excludes the other and propagates the building of walls and fences?
- Will heads of State stop killing their own people –in the name of quelling dissent and rebellion?
- Will human rights violations particularly of the IDPs and the refugees be addressed immediately?
- Will increased funding for education of the vulnerable and the marginalised become the corner stone for a more inclusive and egalitarian world?
As part of the WHS, the UN has launched a major campaign ‘Education cannot wait!’ stating: “One in four of the world’s school-aged children – 462 million – now live in countries affected by crisis. Of these children, 75 million are in the most desperate need of support: they are either in danger of or already missing out on their right to education. Education gives children the building blocks to rebuild their lives and, eventually, their country.”
These are but some of the questions! Unless there is a clear political resolve to address endemic issues – nothing may change dramatically. The WHS is an opportunity – for the sake of millions of people the world over – which cannot be wasted. It should not be allowed to be an exercise in futility or a mere cosmetic with empty rhetoric! Those who are there MUST realise that the time to ACT is NOW! Tomorrow will be too late!
(Fr Cedric Prakash, an Indian priest, is currently posted in Lebanon).
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Baher Kamal
When, in March 2015, delegates from the Middle East met in Amman for their regional consultations round in preparation for the two-day World Humanitarian Summit which opened in Istanbul today, most likely what they had in mind is the fact that their region was – and still is – the dramatic set of “the mother of all humanitarian crises.”
Nevertheless, as a sort of reminder, the United Nations told them again: “millions of people, from Libya to Palestine, from Yemen to Syria and Iraq, have had their lives completely overturned by violence.”
They were also reminded that the huge numbers of people affected by conflict, violence and displacement did little to convey the real trauma experienced.
The Facts
The United Nations reported “more people are displaced by conflict than at any time since 1945.” Figures are self-explanatory. There are currently an estimated total of 60 million forcibly displaced people –either at home or abroad — across the globe.
Of these:
— 5 million Palestinian refugees are still dispersed mostly in neighbouring countries such as Lebanon, Syria and Jordan, according to the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA);
— 1,5 million people are practically besieged in the Palestinian Gaza Strip, in a permanent humanitarian crisis;
— 4 million Syrian civilians so far had to flee war as refugees seeking safety in the region and in Europe, as an immediate consequence of the Syrian five-year long conflict, the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) estimates;
— 1 million Syrians have been forcibly displaced from their homes in their own country, according to the United Nations;
— 1 million Libyans are victims of uncontrolled armed fights in their own, unstable state. “There is alarming information coming from Libya about grave acts that could amount to war crimes,” UN secretary general Ban Ki-moon warned on 6 March 2016;
— 5 million Iraqis have been sentenced to the condition of being either refugees abroad or ‘refugees’ at home. Already in July 2015, the top UN humanitarian official in Iraq declared as “devastating” the closure of life-saving
services in Iraq for people in need, citing the most recent shut-downs of basic health care will directly impact more than one million people, including some 500,000 children who now will not be immunised, spreading risk of a measles outbreak and resumption of polio;
— 1 million Syrian refugees live in Lebanon. The UN reported six months ago that some 70 per cent of these refugees were living below the extreme poverty line in Lebanon;
— 2 million civilian Yemenis fled to even another war long-hit country–Somalia as result of the on-going armed conflict. More than 15.2 million Yemenis lack access to health care services, well over half the war-torn country’s total population, yet there is a 55 per cent gap in requested international funding to address the crisis, according to the World Health Organisation.
Photo credit: Human Wrongs Watch
In other words—the Middle East is both the origin of and/or home to 1 in 3 refugees and displaced persons in the whole world.
These major figures refer to the known as ‘traditional’ Middle East region, comprising 22 Arab countries and Israel.
The data go much further when it comes to the so-called “Greater Middle East”, which also include armed conflicts in Afghanistan and Pakistan. The extended region would be in this case origin and home to additional 10 million refugees and displaced persons, this making nearly half of their total numbers all over the planet.
The Ira of Nature
But not only wars and conflicts hit the Middle East–natural disasters do more damage, last longer, and in many places recur before people have even had a chance to recover, according to the United Nations.
So, while all the above is a consequence of armed conflicts, there are other dramatic facts the make of the Middle East ‘the mother of all humanitarian crises’.
Just some examples:
— The Middle East risks to become an ‘uninhabitable’ region due to the impact of climate change
— 2 in 3 Arab countries already suffer from acute water shortage, while the remaining third is considered water unsafe nations;
— The United Nations predicts 40 per cent water shortfall by 2030. The Middle East is expected to be one of the most impacted.
In short, a whole region of nearly 400 million people is already victim of man-made disasters, be these wars and violence or simply the expected response of nature.
“We see it, we live it,…”
The Istanbul World Humanitarian Summit will focus on five key areas: to prevent and end conflict; to respect the rules of war; to leave no one behind; to work differently to end need, and to invest in humanity.
When announcing the Summit, top UN officials, headed by the secretary general Ban Ki-moon, have repeatedly warned that the world is living the worst ever-humanitarian crisis since World War II.
Herve Verhoosel, spokesperson of the World Humanitarian Summit, recently wrote in IPS “We have arrived at the point of no return. At this very moment the world is witnessing the highest level of humanitarian needs since World War Two.”
“We are experiencing a human catastrophe on a titanic scale: 125 million in dire need of assistance, over 60 million people forcibly displaced, and 218 million people affected by disasters each year for the past two decades,” Verhoosel said.
This makes a total of 400 million victims, the equivalent to some 80 per cent of the entire European population.
Verhoosel gave specific figures: more than 20 billion dollars are needed to aid the 37 countries currently affected by disasters and conflicts.
“Unless immediate action is taken, 62 percent of the global population– nearly two-thirds of all of us- could be living in what is classified as fragile situations by 2030. Time and time again we heard that our world is at a tipping point. Today these words are truer than ever before.”
The situation has hit home, Verhoosel said. “We are slowly understanding that none of us is immune to the ripple effects of armed conflicts and natural disasters. We’re coming face to face with refugees from war-torn nations and witnessing first-hand the consequences of global warming in our own backyards.”
“We see it, we live it, and we can no longer deny it.”
(Baher Kamal, Egyptian-born, Spanish-national secular journalist. He is founder and publisher of Human Wrongs Watch. Kamal is a pro-peace, non-violence, human rights, coexistence defender. This article was first published on Human Wrongs Watch).