Left Behind to Starve
A humanitarian disaster is engulfing Africa as cash is poured into the
war with Iraq and its aftermath
By George Monbiot. Published in the Guardian 18th March 2003
There is surely no more obvious symptom of the corruption of western
politics than the disproportion between the money available for sustaining
life and the money available for terminating it. We could, I think, expect
that, if they were asked to vote on the matter, most of the citizens of
the rich world would demand that their governments spend as much on humanitarian
aid as they spend on developing new means of killing people. But the military-industrial
complex is a beast which becomes both fiercer and greedier the more it
is fed.
As the United States prepares to spend some $12 billion a month on bombing
the Iraqis, it has so far offered only $65 million to provide them with
food, water, sanitation, shelter and treatment for the injuries they are
likely to receive1. A confidential UN contingency plan for Iraq, which
was leaked in January, suggests that the war could expose around one million
children to "risk of death from malnutrition." It warns that "the collapse
of essential services in Iraq could lead to a humanitarian emergency of
proportions well beyond the capacity of UN agencies and other aid organizations."2
Around 60 per cent of the population is entirely dependent on the oil
for food programme, administered by the Iraqi government. This scheme
was suspended by the UN yesterday, leaving the Iraqis reliant on foreign
aid. The money pledged so far is enough to sustain the Iraqis for less
than a fortnight3.
It is hard to believe, however, that the US government will leave them
to starve once it has captured their country. For the weeks or months
during which Iraq dominates the news, the US will be obliged to defend
them from the most immediate impacts of the institutional collapse its
war will cause. Afterwards, like the people of Afghanistan, the Iraqis
will be first forgotten by the media and then deserted by those who promised
to support them.
But even before the first troops cross the border, the impending war
has caused a global humanitarian crisis. As donor countries set aside
their aid budgets to save both themselves and the United States from embarrassment
under the camera lights in Baghdad, they have all but ceased to provide
money to other nations. The world, as a result, could soon be confronted
by a humanitarian funding crisis graver than any since the end of the
Second World War.
Every year, in November, the UN agencies which deal with disasters launch
what they call a "consolidated appeal" for each of the countries suffering
a "complex emergency". They expect to receive the money they request by
May of the following year. The payments and promises they have extracted
so far chart the collapse of international concern for the people of almost
every nation except Iraq.
In Eritrea, for example, the drought is so severe that the water table
has fallen by ten metres. Most of the nation's crops have failed and grain
prices have doubled. Seventy per cent of its 3.3 million people are now
classified as vulnerable to famine4. The United Nations has asked the
rich countries for $163m to help them. It has received $4m, or 2.5% of
the money it requested5.
Burundi, where almost one sixth of the inhabitants have been forced out
of their homes by conflict and natural disasters, and which is now officially
listed as the third poorest nation on earth, has received 3% of its UN
request. Liberia, where rebels have rendered much of the western part
of the country uninhabitable, forcing some 500,000 people out of their
homes, has been given 1.2%; Sierra Leone, where lassa fever is now rampaging
through the refugee camps, has received 1%; and Guinea, which has recently
taken 82,000 refugees from Cote d'Ivoire, 0.4%. Somalia, Sudan and the
Democratic Republic of Congo have all received less than 6%.
Much of the money for these invisible countries has come from donor nations
with relatively small economies, such as Sweden, Norway, Canada and Ireland.
"The state of Africa", Tony Blair told his party conference in October
2001, "is a scar on the conscience of the world, but if the world focused
on it, we could heal it"6. Well, let it now be a scar on the conscience
of Tony Blair.
As a result of this unprecedented failure by the rich nations to cough
up, the people of the forgotten countries will, very soon, begin to starve
to death. The UN has warned that "a break in supplies" to Eritrea "is
now inevitable"7. The World Food Programme has started feeding fewer people
there, but will run out of food within two months. In Burundi it can,
it says, continue feeding people "for another four weeks"8. Beans will
run out in Liberia this month; cereals in May9. One hundred thousand refugees
in Guinea could find themselves without food by August10. Yet neither
of the two governments which are about to launch a "humanitarian war"
appear to be concerned by the impending humanitarian catastrophes in the
world's poorest nations.
The aid crisis is now so serious that it is restricting disaster relief
even in nations which are considered by the major powers to be geopolitically
important. The UN agencies have so far received just 2.9% of their request
for Palestine, and 8.4% of the money they need in Afghanistan.
The latter figure is, in light of the repeated promises made by the nations
prosecuting the war there, extraordinary. "To the Afghan people we make
this commitment," Blair pledged during the same speech in October 2001.
"The conflict will not be the end. We will not walk away, as the outside
world has done so many times before."11 Three months later, the UN estimated
that Afghanistan would need at least $10bn for reconstruction over the
following five years. The US, which had just spent $4.5bn on bombing the
country, offered $300m for the first year and refused to make any commitment
for subsequent years. This year, George Bush "forgot" to produce an aid
budget for Afghanistan, until he was forced to provide another $300m by
Congress12.
The government, which has an annual budget of just $460 million - or
around half of what the US still spends every month on chasing the remnants
of Al Qaeda through the mountains - is effectively bankrupt. At the beginning
of this month the Afghan president, Hamid Karzai, flew to Washington to
beg George Bush for more money. He was given $50m, $35m of which the US
insists is spent on the construction of a five-star hotel in Kabul13.
Karzai, in other words, has discovered what the people of Iraq will soon
find out: generosity dries up when you are yesterday's news.
If, somehow, you are still suffering from the delusion that this war
is to be fought for the sake of the Iraqi people, I would invite you to
consider the record of the prosecuting nations. We may believe that George
Bush and Tony Blair have the interests of foreigners at heart only when
they spend more on feeding them than they spend on killing them.
www.monbiot.com
References:
1. The Center for Economic & Social Rights, 7 Mar 2003. The Human Costs
of War in Iraq. New York.
2. United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs,
January 7, 2003. "Integrated Humanitarian Contingency Plan for Iraq and
Neighboring Countries," Confidential Draft. Cited in The Center for Economic
& Social Rights, ibid.
3. The oil for food programme was to have supplied the Iraqis with over
$1bn in humanitarian supplies between December 2002 and June 2003, a rate
of over $40m a week, which would have provided basic subsistence. So far
official pledges amount to $80m ($65 m from the US and $15 m from the
UK). Humanitarian costs rise during war time.
4. UN OCHA Integrated Regional Information Network, 11 March 2003. Eritrea:
Funding crisis as food situation becomes critical.
5. All the statistics on Consolidated Appeal requests come from: http://www.reliefweb.int/fts/reports/reports.asp?section=CE&year=2003.
Viewed on 16 March 2003.
6. Tony Blair, 2 October 2001. Speech to the Labour Party conference,
Brighton.
7. World Food Programme, 14 Mar 2003 . WFP Emergency Report No. 11 of
2003
8. ibid.
9. ibid.
10. ibid.
11. Tony Blair, ibid.
12. eg http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/2759789.stm
13. US Department of State, 7 March 2003. OPIC pledges additional $50
million for U.S. investment in Afghanistan 18th March 2003
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