"Humanitarian aid in Kosovo in 1999 had an even closer link to the interests of 
the large powers, especially the Europeans. Certainly, one reason why large 
amounts of aid was provided to Kosovar refugees in Macedonia and Albania was to 
prevent the refugees from trying to immigrate to other countries in Europe. 
"Keep the refugees comfortable in Macedonia - and they won't try to go to 
Paris" was how one relief worker described to me a factor underlying the 
generosity of European aid donors. U.S. humanitarian aid to Haiti in the mid 
1990s had much the same purpose: keep the Haitians at home. 

 

"So, what is the answer to the question as to why Kosovar refugees received 
$207 each in UN assistance in 1999 and Congolese refugees and displaced persons 
received only $8? The Kosovars had on their side at least two of the above 
three factors: their plight had the attention of the media and they were 
important to the national interests of the large donors of international 
assistance. The Congo had none of the three factors listed above operating in 
its favor. "

 

 

http://www.icva.ch/doc00000937.html 


Humanitarian Emergencies: 
Why Does Kosovo Get More Aid Than the Congo? 


Larry Thompson
Director of Advocacy for Refugees International 

Paper for the ICVA Conference on 
NGOs in a Changing World Order: Dilemmas and Challenges
Geneva, 14-15 February 2003 

  _____  

Introduction 

The lives of tens of millions of people around the world are threatened by 
conflict, ethnic violence, drought and natural disaster. A large number of 
organizations - governmental, non-governmental, and United Nations - are 
devoted to providing humanitarian assistance to helping victims of humanitarian 
disasters survive. 

Humanitarian aid to persons impacted by conflict or natural disaster is a 
growth industry. In 1990, international humanitarian assistance amounted to 
about $2 billion; by 2000 the total was up to nearly $5 billion  
<http://www.icva.ch/doc00000937.html#1> 1.. The huge humanitarian crises in 
Afghanistan and several regions of Africa likely mean additional large 
increases in humanitarian in 2002 and again in 2003. 

The United States is the largest donor of humanitarian assistance with its 
share in recent years amounting to about 35 percent of the world total The 15 
member countries of the European Union plus the European Community Humanitarian 
Office (ECHO) are the second largest donors, and Japan ranks third. 

The needs of refugees, displaced persons, and other victims of humanitarian 
disasters and conflicts are usually predictable. Protection, clean water, food, 
shelter, clothing, sanitation, and medical care in varying mixes are the 
requirements for sustaining lives in emergency situations. 

But the response to those needs varies tremendously around the world and from 
emergency to emergency. An incomplete but illustrative measurement is UN 
spending on different humanitarian emergencies. In Kosovo, in 1999, for example 
the UN spent $207 for each affected person; In Sierra Leone, the UN spent $16 
for each person; in Congo the UN spent $8 per person  
<http://www.icva.ch/doc00000937.html#2> 2.. These figures are not all-inclusive 
as they do not include bi-lateral humanitarian aid programs which would narrow 
-- but by no means -- close the gap. UN spending on refugees is largely 
determined by voluntary contributions from donors and thus, the major donors to 
the UN voted with their pocketbooks that they were far more interested and 
concerned about Kosovar refugees and displaced people than Congolese. 

What I want to do is to suggest brief answers to three questions: First, why do 
some humanitarian emergencies receive more attention than others? Then, I want 
to turn the first question upside down to respond to a second question: How do 
you identify humanitarian emergencies which are not getting the attention they 
deserve? And finally I want to ask what my organization - Refugees 
International - and other organizations might do to help remedy the situation. 

Why do some humanitarian emergencies receive more attention than others? 

Answers to this question usually focuses on three topics. First, media coverage 
of the emergency; secondly, the national interests of the aid donors, and 
third, the influence of aid organizations. 
<http://www.icva.ch/doc00000937.html#3> 3.. 

*       Media coverage. This is what is often called "the CNN factor" 
Humanitarian emergencies which receive extensive publicity, such as Kosovo and, 
recently, Afghanistan are believed to get more attention and assistance from 
donors. Thus, humanitarian emergencies which are unpublicized, such as the 
Congo, may receive less assistance. The theory behind the "CNN factor" is that 
people and governments respond to the needs of people they see on their 
television screens. 
*       National Interests of the AID donors. Humanitarian assistance is 
perceived by the big donors as an arm of their foreign policy. Afghanistan is a 
recent example in which the United States and its allies perceived that 
providing humanitarian aid to Afghan civilians was important to achieving 
political and military objectives. 

Humanitarian aid in Kosovo in 1999 had an even closer link to the interests of 
the large powers, especially the Europeans. Certainly, one reason why large 
amounts of aid was provided to Kosovar refugees in Macedonia and Albania was to 
prevent the refugees from trying to immigrate to other countries in Europe. 
"Keep the refugees comfortable in Macedonia - and they won't try to go to 
Paris" was how one relief worker described to me a factor underlying the 
generosity of European aid donors. U.S. humanitarian aid to Haiti in the mid 
1990s had much the same purpose: keep the Haitians at home. 

*       Influence of aid organizations. Another factor influencing the level of 
humanitarian aid is the lobbying and influence of aid and citizen's 
organizations for a particular cause. Southern Sudan, for example, is cited as 
one area in which donors have provided humanitarian assistance over a long 
period of time primarily because aid agencies and non-governmental 
organizations have maintained pressure on donor countries to provide 
assistance. 

An even better example might be the cause of the Tibetans versus that of the 
Uighers. The plight of the Tibetans, whose culture is being overrun by the Han 
Chinese, is familiar to most of us. But how many have ever heard of the Uighers 
- a people in western China who have a similar cause? Why? Some observers have 
said the difference is that the Tibetans have a support structure of foreigners 
and foreign organizations plus a charismatic leader - and the Uighers do not. 

So, what is the answer to the question as to why Kosovar refugees received $207 
each in UN assistance in 1999 and Congolese refugees and displaced persons 
received only $8? The Kosovars had on their side at least two of the above 
three factors: their plight had the attention of the media and they were 
important to the national interests of the large donors of international 
assistance. The Congo had none of the three factors listed above operating in 
its favor. 

We also have to acknowledge a racial and ethnic factor which influences the 
level of humanitarian assistance. Donors may be more generous with people who 
"look like them." This is true not only of Americans and Europeans, but others. 
Aid from rich Islamic states, for example, tends to be dedicated to helping 
other Muslims - and I would comment in passing that contributions to UN 
humanitarian organizations from most oil-rich countries are low and sporadic. 

Traditional ties with other states play a factor. The British have taken the 
lead in trying to resolve the conflict in Sierra Leone, a former colony. France 
is famously perceived to be partial to French-speaking people and countries. 
And the traditionally close ties between Germany and Croatia contributed to the 
German decision to recognize Croatia as an independent state in 1991, thereby 
contributing to the violent breakup of Yugoslavia. 

Important in some cases also are that, despite the UN and donor willingness to 
work in the country, the situation is so dangerous or the local authorities so 
obstructive that it is difficult to carry out humanitarian aid programs. North 
Korea is a country which has placed so many restrictions on aid agencies that 
many have been unable -or unwilling - to work there, despite the need. Chechnya 
is a region in which the lack of security for humanitarian aid workers chills 
efforts to provide humanitarian aid to the victims of the conflict between 
Chechens and Russia. 

How do you identify humanitarian emergencies which aren't getting the attention 
they deserve? 

The answer is that you turn upside down the three factors influencing 
humanitarian assistance listed above. Neglected, forgotten, or what are often 
called "silent emergencies" are those in which media coverage is sparse, in 
which the national interests of the large donors of humanitarian aid are not 
engaged, and where the country or region lacks a "support system" of 
influential and interested foreign aid organizations. 

ECHO has worked toward developing a methodology to identify "forgotten crises" 
and expressed a commitment to increase assistance to forgotten emergencies. 
ECHO has identified the following countries as priorities for increased 
attention: Chechnya, Burmese refugees in Thailand, Western Sahara refugees in 
Algeria, and Uganda.  <http://www.icva.ch/doc00000937.html#4> 4.. However, 
observers have noted that despite the ECHO pledge to address forgotten crises, 
former Yugoslavia was again the largest recipient of European humanitarian aid 
in 2001.  <http://www.icva.ch/doc00000937.html#5> 5.. 

Another factor to be taken into consideration in identifying forgotten 
humanitarian emergencies is the level of contributions provided to UN agencies, 
especially the UN High Commissioner for Refugees and the World Food Programme, 
to address the emergency. 

To assist the victims of humanitarian emergencies, the UN issues "appeals" to 
member states to contribute to a fund to help the people of the country in 
need. The response to those appeals determines the level of UN assistance. A 
look at the response to the World Food Programmes appeal for 2002 gives an idea 
of neglected countries. The most undersubscribed appeals for food in 2002 
include the following: Palestinian territories, Southern Africa, Pakistan, 
Eritrea, Kenya, and Central America.  <http://www.icva.ch/doc00000937.html#6> 
6.. Conclusions reached from this data should be used with some caution, 
however, as bi-lateral food assistance often fills some of the needs identified 
by the WFP. For example, the United States provides substantial bi-lateral food 
aid to Central America. 

What can Refugees International -- and other non-governmental organizations - 
do to help focus attention on forgotten humanitarian emergencies? 

My organization, Refugees International, is a non-governmental advocacy 
organization speaking on behalf of refugees, displaced persons, and other 
vulnerable people around the world. We are independent and we do not accept 
funds from governments or the UN. 

We work as follows: our advocates visit the sites of humanitarian crises and 
talk to refugees and relief workers to determine the most urgent humanitarian 
needs of the people and the gaps in filling those needs. Sometimes, for 
example, the biggest problem is lack of food. Other times it may be shelter, 
and on some occasions it may be protecting innocent men, women, and children 
from being killed or injured in a conflict. 

The purpose of our visits to humanitarian crisis areas is to stimulate 
humanitarian action on behalf of refugees and other vulnerable people. We 
distribute our findings and recommendations for actions to policy makers, the 
media, and the public, and push for action by governments and UN agencies to 
save lives. 

We call ourselves an early warning/early action humanitarian organization. We 
try to identify developing humanitarian crises as quickly as possible and to 
stimulate early action to prevent human suffering - especially for the most 
vulnerable, most forgotten, and most neglected people. 

What Refugees International as an organization can do is attempt to balance the 
unequal share of the attention given to some humanitarian emergencies by 
putting a spotlight on neglected and forgotten people who are not receiving the 
attention and resources they need to survive. 

Too often, it seems, the emergency of the moment -- often a CNN moment -- 
captures the attention of the policy makers and the aid donors and other 
equally serious humanitarian problems are neglected. In identifying and 
publicizing neglected emergencies, Refugees International joins other 
organizations in trying to stimulate an increase in the political, economic, 
and humanitarian attention given by the major aid donors and international 
organizations to forgotten and neglected people around the world. 

* * * 

1. OECD/DAC estimates. 2000 figure does not include approximately $1.5 billion 
spent on refugees within donor countries. 

Back <http://www.icva.ch/doc00000937.html#Back 1>  

2. Jefferys, Anna, "Giving Voice to Silent Emergencies," Humanitarian Exchange 
- the Magazine of the Humanitarian Practice Network, March 2002 (revised 
October 2002). 

Back <http://www.icva.ch/doc00000937.html#Back 2>  

3. A recent study of these factors is "Olsen, Gorm Rye, Carstensen, Nils and 
Hoyen, Kristian, "Humanitarian Crises: What Determines the Level of Emergency 
Assistance? Media Coverage, Donor Interests, and the Aid Business," prepared 
for an October 23, 2002 conference in Copenhagen on forgotten humanitarian 
crises. See: http://www.forgottencrises.dk/speakers.htm 

Back <http://www.icva.ch/doc00000937.html#Back 3>  

4. Nielson, Poul, speech October 23, 2002. 
http://europa.eu.int/rapid/start/cgi/guestfr.ksh?p_action.gettxt=gt 
<http://europa.eu.int/rapid/start/cgi/guestfr.ksh?p_action.gettxt=gt&doc=SPEECH/02/510|0|RAPID&lg=EN&display=>
 &doc=SPEECH/02/510|0|RAPID&lg=EN&display= 

Back <http://www.icva.ch/doc00000937.html#Back 4>  

5. Jefferys, op cit 

Back <http://www.icva.ch/doc00000937.html#Back 5>  

6. "Status of 2002 Food Aid Needs and Shortfalls", WFP - assisted Emergency and 
Protracted Relief and Recovery Operations (As of July 2002). 

Back <http://www.icva.ch/doc00000937.html#Back 6>  

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