Ascend, Evolve, Expand.....: Catastrophe for Millions    
 Catastrophe for Millions1 comment
10 Mar 2003 @ 12:23, by Sandi Hunter

West's failure to donate humanitarian aid threatens catastrophe for millions

UN given only quarter of requested funds as plans fall behind

Jonathan Steele and Luke Harding in Soran, northern Iraq
Monday March 10, 2003
The Guardian

With a war against Iraq perhaps days away, the world's richest governments have given the United Nations barely a quarter of the funds its agencies have asked for to deal with the expected humanitarian catastrophe.

"We made an updated appeal for $120m (£75m) in February and have so far received $30m (£18.75m)," Elizabeth Byrs, the Geneva spokesperson for the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Activities (Unocha), said yesterday.

The result of this shortfall in funds is starkly illustrated by the empty field near the Kurdish town of Soran. There are no tents. There is no sanitation. In fact, there is nothing at all - merely a vast, muddy plain beneath a freezing snow-covered mountain. But it is here, close to the border with Iran, that authorities in opposition-controlled northern Iraq are planning to house tens of thousands of refugees.

Kurdish officials admit they are unprepared to deal with the looming refugee crisis because the international community has offered insufficient help.

The UN has predicted that up to 2 million Iraqis could be left homeless by the war. Many are expected to flee to neighbouring countries such as Iran, Syria, Jordan and Turkey. Close to a million refugees are likely to be displaced within Iraq itself, aid workers believe, and half of these will seek sanctuary in the Kurdish self-rule enclave of northern Iraq.

"We now believe that people from the south and centre will move to the north once they perceive this is a relatively safe area," said Giorgio Francia, Relief International's head of mission in northern Iraq. "Once the bombing starts they will try to leave cities like Kirkuk and Mosul."
The two Kurdish regional administrations in northern Iraq have drawn up emergency plans to accommodate refugees in 25 camps but say they have virtually no tents or medicines.

"We have been lobbying the European Union and the Americans for two months. We have asked for shelters, tents and medicines. They have promised us help but we don't know whether we are going to get it in time. We are talking about a major crisis here," said Sakvan Farhan, the head of Kurdistan's emergency coordination department.

The same shortages await the 600,000 people who are expected to try to flee Iraq. UN plans to amass stocks of food and medicines for the millions of Iraqis likely to need help are a long way behind schedule.

One of the UN's biggest worries is the future of the oil-for-food programme. Around 16 million people, more than 60% of the Iraqi population, depend on it. At the moment the Iraqi government imports food commercially through a UN-supervised programme. It is distributed by Iraqis via 45,000 outlets in every big city in a scheme which is accepted even by the US and the UK as fair and efficient.

Once the first shot is fired, distribution is likely to stop because drivers will fear going into a war zone. The Iraqi government last month gave people two months' ration but aid agencies say the poorest Iraqis have sold some of it. Even if they do not flee their homes under bombing raids, they will be at risk of hunger. UN officials will be withdrawn from Iraq in advance of the bombing, and there is no guarantee when their programmes will resume.

The World Food Programme appealed for $23m to finance "an initial contingency plan" which would stockpile enough food just outside Iraq to give meagre rations for 900,000 people for 10 weeks. "So far only enough is in place for 500,000 for 10 weeks. We have received only $7.5m," said Trevor Rowe, the WFP spokesman. "We may have to feed more than 10 times the number we appealed for, that is, 10 million people."

The UNHCR is equally short of funds. It has received $16.3m out of the $60m it asked for, which means it has stocks of tents, plastic sheeting and jerry cans ready for 180,000 people instead of the 600,000 refugees it estimates. This is a best case analysis. The worst case analysis is that around 900,000 people will try to leave Iraq and another million will be displaced inside it.
Besides the money given by governments, most UN agencies have been dipping into reserve funds in the hope that they can replenish them later.

The US defence department has promised to deliver ready-to-eat meals similiar to those it dropped by air on Afghanistan during the bombing campaign of 2001. It is reported to have three million rations ready.

But US and British non-government organisations are worried that the Pentagon's role in relief programmes makes independent aid charities look as though they support the war.

The directors of several UK agencies met Jack Straw, the foreign secretary, last week to express their concern. "We've got to have an organisation which is not part of the military campaign. This affects people's confidence. We want the UN to take over immediately and be involved fully in the planning already now," Roger Riddell, Christian Aid's director, said yesterday.

"We could not operate as part of a war effort involving the US. I'm not sure the Americans understand this. You can't go in as though God is on your side and aid just goes in with the troops," said Mike Aaronson, the director of the Save the Children Fund.

The role of the UN is seen as crucial. "We don't want to be seen as handmaidens of belligerent governments and without a UN mandate for the war we would find it hard to take money from the US or British governments," said Will Day, chief executive of Care International UK.

Unicef, the children's agency, has been warning since December of potential catastrophe for Iraq's children. It expects a huge surge in malnutrition rates for under-fives and of deaths from contaminated water. In the absence of new money from donor governments it has withdrawn $7m from its own emergency programme fund to pay for high protein biscuits and therapeutic milk, water purification tablets and other supplies.

The United States has given some funding to the UN but is reserving most of its cash for its own airdrops. About $78m has been allocated, according to Andrew Natsios, the director of the US Agency for International Development. This is not even 1% of the amount which the military side of the war is expected to cost.

The only good news is that countries which initially said they would close their borders to fleeing Iraqis have changed their minds. Iran has prepared three out of 10 selected campsites. Up to 300,000 refugees are expected to flee to Iran. Having already absorbed more than 2 million refugees from Afghanistan and Iraq in previous conflicts, the Iranian government says refugees will not be allowed beyond the border area.

Jordan has authorised the UNHCR to start setting up camps for 100,000 people in a remote part of the eastern desert .

Special report
Refugees

Special investigation
Maggie O'Kane: the refugee trail

Useful links
British Refugee Council
Home Office: immigration and nationality directorate
The Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002
Human Rights Watch: refugees
International Committee of the Red Cross: refugees
Journal of Refugee Studies
UN High Commission for Refugees
US Committee for Refugees

******

In a comment regarding the upcoming UN vote regarding “war” with Iraq;

“He said the White House would be disappointed if Russia were to veto. "The President would look at this as a missed opportunity for Russia to take an important moral stand to defend freedom," Fleischer said.

[< Back] [Ascend, Evolve, Expand.....]

Category:  


1 comment

13 Mar 2003 @ 15:58 by sharie : Pope to Bush
Hi Sandi, thanks for the post. Have you seen this:

Pope to Bush: Go into Iraq and You Go Without God
Capitol Hill Blue

Wednesday 5 March 2003

Pope John Paul II has a strong message for President George W. Bush: God is not on your side if you invade Iraq.
But the President told the pope's envoy the leader of the world's Catholics is wrong.

Pleading for peace, an emissary from Pope John Paul II questioned Bush Wednesday on whether he was doing all he could to avert what the envoy called an "unjust" war with Iraq.

Bush said removing Saddam Hussein would make the world more peaceful.

The president met with Cardinal Pio Laghi, a former Vatican ambassador to the United States and a Bush family friend, on Ash Wednesday, the start of the Christian Lenten season of penance and spiritual renewal leading up to Easter.

Bush told the envoy in a 40-minute meeting that "if it comes to the use of force, he believes it will make the world better," said White House spokesman Ari Fleischer, who attended the private meeting. "Removing the threat to the region will lead to a better, more peaceful world in which innocent Iraqis will have a better life."

Laghi came bearing the pope's message: A war would be a "defeat for humanity" and would be neither morally nor legally justified.

The Pope also questioned the President's statements invoking God's name as justification for the invasion.

"God is a neutral observer in the affairs of man," the Pope said. "Man cannot march into war and assume God will be at his side."

In Rome, the pope called for "common efforts to spare humanity another dramatic conflict."

The Vatican stands by its view that a pre-emptive strike on Iraq is immoral unless backed by the United Nations, Laghi said.
"It's illegal, it's unjust," Laghi told reporters after the session with Bush.

"There are still peaceful avenues within the context of the vast patrimony of international law and institutions which exist for that purpose," Laghi said. "There is great unity on this grave matter on the part of the Holy See, the bishops in the United States, and the church throughout the world," he said.

Laghi posed a series of questions to Bush that reflected the differences between the White House and the Vatican on Iraq, said a senior administration official. The questions included the importance of an international effort to confront Saddam and what the envoy said was a gulf between the Western and Muslim worlds.

Bush disagreed on the last point, saying the U.S. effort to expand education opportunities to children had brought the Muslim and Western nations closer together, the administration official said.

Laghi delivered a letter in which the pope urged Bush to listen carefully to the envoy. Neither the letter nor the envoy specifically urged Bush to avoid war, the U.S. official said.

Laghi said he left the White House with hope "in spite of the fact that the situation is what it is."

Bush has rarely met with opponents of his Iraq stand in recent months. He almost always meets with leaders who agree with him, but has spoken by phone with adversaries.

Bush, a Methodist, has taken pains throughout his presidency to court Catholic voters, who made up a quarter of the electorate in 2000 and split their votes between Bush and Democrat Al Gore. White House officials pointed out that Bush and the envoy also discussed abortion and cloning, two issues on which the administration and the Vatican generally agree.

The polite exchange described by White House aides reflected the careful language of diplomacy used by both sides, even when they disagree.

In a May visit to the Vatican, Bush told the pope he was "concerned" about the Catholic church's standing in America, where the church has been rocked by sex-abuse scandal.

(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.)  



Your Name:
Your URL: (or email)
Subject:       
Comment:
For verification, please type the word you see on the left:


Other entries in
16 Nov 2007 @ 22:50: Finally someone speaks out......
23 Jun 2007 @ 20:33: The lies that kill and wound.....
26 Oct 2006 @ 19:34: Support Our Troops!!!
18 Aug 2006 @ 18:27: free of suffering
3 Aug 2006 @ 18:54: more positive reasons
28 Jul 2006 @ 00:39: Declassified archives....
21 Jul 2006 @ 19:26: The real aims.....
18 May 2005 @ 15:38: The Reality Beyond Your Denial....
16 May 2005 @ 21:36: They Said It Couldn’t Happen Here
15 Apr 2005 @ 00:52: Leaving the World Behind


[< Back] [Ascend, Evolve, Expand.....] [PermaLink]?