A humanitarian crisis is sweeping across Africa as wars, popular
uprisings, separatist movements, drought, natural disasters and
diseases displace people, raising serious questions on the priorities of
economic managers and political leaders.
Apart from
the well publicised war or instability in countries like Somalia, South
Sudan, regions of Democratic Republic of Congo, Central Africa Republic,
Sudan, Libya and Algeria, more than half of African countries are in
some form of turbulence, according to the United Nations Office for
Co-ordination of Humanitarian Affairs (Ocha).
The crises manifest themselves in big refugee populations, both internal and external, hunger and malnutrition, unemployment and civil strife as people compete for increasingly fewer resources — means of sustenance like water and land, social amenities like schools and basic commodities.
The crises manifest themselves in big refugee populations, both internal and external, hunger and malnutrition, unemployment and civil strife as people compete for increasingly fewer resources — means of sustenance like water and land, social amenities like schools and basic commodities.
An
assessment of humanitarian needs for this year by the UN shows that $25
billion will be required to assist 94 million people who are in need,
including those in Syria.
So far, $14 billion has been
pledged to the UN and the organisation would wish to reach another 46
million vulnerable people resources allowing.
Last
year, more than half of the funding, or 55 per cent, went to Somalia,
South Sudan, Sudan and Syria, proof that Africa bears the brunt of the
humanitarian crisis despite overall economic and development gains.
Conflict
While the bulk of the responsibility for stemming the crises
lies with governments and political leaders, the UN believes the
escalation of conflicts and cost can be reduced substantially through
early detection and preventive measures.
“By working
together, we can make anticipatory and early action become our default
approach in addressing vulnerability and reducing the scale of a
possible crisis. Our efforts will be measured in how many lives we
manage to transform and save,” the UN Under-Secretary for Humanitarian
Affairs and Emergency Relief co-ordinator Mark Lowcock said on Twitter
last week.
He had just allocated $45 million for food
and nutrition, safe water, livelihood protection and other emergency
humanitarian support to drought-affected people across Somalia, Ethiopia
and Kenya.
Citing World Bank and World Food Programme
findings, Mr Lowcock said early response to famine reduced costs by 30
per cent, with the cost of food in particular falling by half when
bought early.
Early response to adversities outside
the unpredictable natural disasters is expected to become more important
as the rise in forced displacement is not the result of an increase in
conflicts.
After peaking in 2014, the number of
political conflicts worldwide decreased by a tenth to 385 in 2017 from
424 in 2014. However, the conflicts were more than the 328 recorded in
2007.
More violence
During
the period, the proportion of violent and highly violent conflicts,
which are more likely to cause human suffering, destruction and
displacement, increased from 53 per cent to 58 per cent of all conflicts
worldwide. The impact of the conflicts also lingers for longer from 5.2
years to 9.3 years.
This has seen the total economic
impact of conflict and violence surge from $14.3 trillion in 2014 to
$14.8 trillion in 2017. Africa and other developing countries bear the
burden of the cost of the conflict with 85 per cent of refugees.
The
loss to conflicts, according to the UN, has undermined equitable and
inclusive development although the number of people living in extreme
poverty dropped to 736 million from 1.2 billion between 2008 and 2015.
Over the same period global productivity rose from $63.4 trillion to $80.7 trillion in 2017.
With regard to the Horn of Africa relief, for instance, 11.5 million people in Ethiopia, Kenya, Uganda and Somalia are affected by drought. More than half of them — 5.8 million — are the displaced in Somalia and Ethiopia.
With regard to the Horn of Africa relief, for instance, 11.5 million people in Ethiopia, Kenya, Uganda and Somalia are affected by drought. More than half of them — 5.8 million — are the displaced in Somalia and Ethiopia.
“The drought could further exacerbate the
risk of displacement and will impact the already precarious situation of
the internally displaced persons, especially newly displaced ones,” UN
agencies said in a position paper last week.
Prolonged drought
Angola,
Lesotho and Namibia are other African countries facing crisis because
of prolonged drought. On May 6, Namibian President Gage Geingob declared
drought a national emergency. Earlier, the government had said it would
subsidise farmers who reduce their herd.
Namibia has
not known normal rainfall since 2013 and 500,000 people are at risk. So
far, 60,000 domestic animals have died this year alone.
In
Angola, President Joao Lourenco declared drought a national emergency
in January and followed it up with an admission this week that the
situation could worsen for more than 2.3 million people who are in need
of food.
"We are worried about the coming months,
especially the next four or five months (until October), which is the
beginning of the rains in the country. Until then, we believe that this
picture, which we observe in Namibe and Cunene, will worsen,” said the
president.
Southern Africa
The
Angolan government intends to buy plastic water containers, water
tanker trucks, drill wells, build dams and water channels in four years
as part of plans to mitigate future droughts.
In
Lesotho, where 380,000 people are in need of humanitarian assistance, a
study by ICAP at Columbia University found a link between adolescent
girls exposed to severe drought conditions in rural areas and higher HIV
prevalence.
Besides drought, Southern and Central Africa is shouldering more hardship wrought by the Ebola pandemic in the DR Congo.
According
to a Unicef update on May 24, the outbreak threatens neighbouring
Uganda, Burundi, Rwanda, South Sudan, Tanzania and Zambia through
movement of refugees.
Rwanda, Tanzania and Zambia
already host more than 530,000 refugees from politically unstable
Burundi and DR Congo where Ebola, combined with rebel militias, has led
to displacements.
“In Eswatini, Lesotho, Rwanda,
Tanzania and Zambia more than 1.6 million people, including over 790,000
children, are in need of humanitarian assistance due to climate-related
shocks, health emergencies and displacement, Unicef said.
Across
Eastern and Southern Africa, the agency said, there are 4.1 million
refugees; about a quarter of the global refugee population with war-torn
South Sudan and Burundi being the main source.
Uganda,
Ethiopia, Angola, Tanzania and Rwanda are the main recipients with
18,000 Congolese refugees having crossed over to neighbouring countries
between January and March this year.
By March 2019,
Tanzania had slightly more than 325,000 refugees, 198,000 of them being
Burundians after a voluntary refugee repatriation programme was halted
in December last year for lack of funding before it resumed in February
to waning interest from those targeted.
“The number of
refugees registering for voluntary repatriation has decreased in 2019,
with more than 50 per cent retractions (20,000 had shown interest), no
shows and convoy dropouts reported since November 2018. The exercise
that run from September 2017 has managed to return 61,000 refugees to
Burundi, only 5,000 of them this year.
DR Congo
citizens constituted the majority of the 148,000 refugees in Rwanda
followed by Burundi as was the case in Zambia where 78,000 people had
fled to.
According to UNHCR, new arrivals of DRC
refugees at Mantampala settlement in Zambia has stabilised this year
since the onset of relative peace with the election of President Felix
Tshisekedi in January.
Cyclones
The
impact of drought in parts of Zimbabwe, Madagascar and Mozambique
worsened with the cyclones (Idai and Kenneth) that hit the countries in
quick succession in March and May.
Despite a peace
agreement signed by warring factions in Central Africa Republic in
February, the security situation remains volatile.
Although
civilians are the main victims of violence in the country, humanitarian
staff and convoys are also key targets with 70 incidents reported in
the year to March compared to 65 in the corresponding period last year,
according to Ocha.
With the African Union and the
Economic Community of Central African States taking turns to lead the
peace process in CAR and unwilling to take a decisive position on the
combatants, Russia announced last week that it would send 30 troops to
beef up the UN mission, MINUSCA, there.
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