---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "John Ashworth" <[email protected]>
Date: 7 Apr 2017 08:17
Subject: [sudans-john-ashworth] Guns are the true cause of hunger and famine
To: "Group" <[email protected]>
Cc:

Feed the starving? Guns are the true cause of hunger and famine

Aid professionals would have you believe that tackling hunger is about
feeding people. Take it from an industry insider – the truth is a lot
more complex

Simon O'Connell, Executive director of Mercy Corps Europe
The Guardian
Thursday 6 April 2017 16.51 BSTLast modified on Thursday 6 April 201719.22
BST

Here we are again. Famine is back. Drought in Somalia, Ethiopia and
Kenya, and the Disasters Emergency Committee has launched an appeal
for east Africa. We are being reminded there is one last chance to
stop utter devastation in South Sudan. More and more horror reveals
itself as areas are taken back from Boko Haram by the Nigerian army.

Outside Africa, across the Gulf of Aden, we are seeing the little
bodies of children wasting away in Yemen.

Aid professionals like me have done a bad job of explaining the
reasons behind fragility and crisis.

We need to be more honest about how complex these phenomena are, and
not oversimplify what we do. That means when we talk about hunger
crises we shouldn’t just ask you to help feed the starving – though
that is desperately needed. We should also talk about conflict.

Last year, the World Bank revised its position on conflict – upgrading
it from being one of many drivers of suffering and poverty, to being
the main driver. In Somalia, despite some political progress the
conflict has put more than half the population in need of assistance,
with 363,000 children suffering acute malnutrition. In north-east
Nigeria, conflict with Boko Haram has left 1.8m people still
displaced, farmers unable to grow crops, and 4.8 million people need
food. In Yemen, an escalation in conflict since 2015 has worsened a
situation already made dire by weak rule of law and governance. Now
more than 14 million people need food aid.

Only if we understand conflict can we understand hunger. South Sudan
is another example. I worked there for two years following the signing
of the comprehensive peace agreement in 2005. Right now a place called
Koch, where Mercy Corps works, is in what the famine early warning
systems network calls a “level 4 emergency phase”.

This means that people will start to die of hunger in a matter of
months if they don’t receive enough aid. Until recent years, Koch was
a thriving community with fertile land. It has been destroyed in armed
clashes since conflict broke out in South Sudan in December 2013.
Families have had to move time and time again and disease is rampant
due to the lack of clean water. As one father of five told our team in
Koch: “My house was burnt, everything was looted and I do not know how
to rebuild my life.”

Across the places where we work and where people are facing
starvation, the pattern is the similar.

Hunger is not some freak environmental event; it is human-made, the
result of a deadly mix of conflict, marginalisation and weak
governance.

Yet watching some of the news and the crisis appeals, one could be
forgiven for thinking that what we need is another Live Aid song and
airdrops of food. Red Nose Day has been criticised for portraying
Africa as a place where “nothing ever grows”.

A recent social media campaign to send a plane filled with food to
Somalia gathered support: a noble gesture, but not a long-term
solution. Mercy Corps’ own emergency response is not the long-term
answer either.

Our team is working in 40C heat, in areas only accessible by
helicopter, to repair boreholes and to provide hygiene supplies and
health information – trying to prevent the spread of cholera that
would devastate communities already weakened by hunger. This work is
vital and it saves lives, but it addresses the symptoms, not the
causes.

In South Sudan, as in Somalia, Nigeria and Yemen, it is not a lack of
food that creates famine. Crises exist because of violence and
conflict. They don’t need more food, they need investment into
conflict prevention and the stability that brings.

Of course, that is easier said than done. Addressing the root causes
of conflict and building resilience to crisis is difficult and
complicated. But organisations like Mercy Corps are constantly
developing better ways to promote peace-building and conflict
prevention, particularly at community level. We need these long-term,
complex approaches to be supported, because they may mean we do not
need another famine appeal. We also need people to understand that we
are trying to address the underlying causes.

I am not for a moment suggesting we shouldn’t support crisis appeals.
Once a community is in the grip of famine it needs assistance, and
fast. These responses save lives. But unless we take time to
understand and support long-term approaches like conflict prevention
and peace-building, we will continue to find ourselves wrestling with
protracted crises, forced migration, and the associated security
issues that affect everyone of us.

https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2017/apr/
06/solving-hunger-famine-feeding-the-starving-simon-o-connell-mercy-corps

END
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John Ashworth

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