Bamiyan Panorama

Bamiyan Panorama
Showing posts with label famine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label famine. Show all posts

Friday, October 21, 2011

Aid in Somalia - that seems to be working!

Did you know that thousands of children in Somalia either look like this, or may look like this soon?  (keep reading, it gets better!)
This is a 4 year old child from southern Somalia named Ahmed Mohamed.  This picture was taken (i believe) on October 19th, 2011 in a hospital in Mogadishu.  Thank goodness he made it to a hospital!!

So..... depressing, right?  Hopeless?  It is so hard for aid to get to Somalia because of the lack of social systems and the ever present violence. 

I found a website for an aid organization that is actually making a difference!  It is called HIJRA (Humanitarian Initiative Just Relief Aid) and here is their website.  http://www.hijra.or.ke/
 The website is very informative but i'll give you suotes from their website showing what they focus on:

Water and Sanitation
Our WASH program components include; the construction of sanitation facilities, the promotion of proper hygiene practices and the delivery of immediate lifesaving support. The program further works to ensure community sustainability and development through the training of independent volunteer Water, Environment and Sanitation (WES) committees.

HIJRA's programs today have built over 6,000 pit latrines, constructed 150 garbage disposal sites, provided 3500 sanitation kits and provided safe water to 150 IDP camps.

HIJRA has successfully worked to construct and install 6 water platforms, 13 water tanks and over 100 distribution points.




Livelihoods
Food Security refers to the availability of food and one's access to it.  One may consider a household “food-secure” when its occupants do not live in hunger or fear of starvation.  Livelihoods covers a board range of activities and programs designed to enhance self-reliance through non-formal education, vocational and skills training programs, income generation activities, and food for work programs. 



Public Health
Public health is "the science and art of preventing disease, prolonging life and promoting health. There are 2 distinct characteristics of public health:
  1. It deals with preventive rather than curative aspects of health
  2. It deals with population-level, rather than individual-level health issues
At HIJRA our focus on Public Health is intervention and prevention rather than treatment through the promotion of healthy behaviors. Our goal is to strengthen the local community; thereby enabling the communities we assist to become self-reliant.

In order to achieve this goal HIJRA will not construct or build new hospitals rather we will work with the community and local leaders to rehabilitate and renew clinics that are already in place.



I strongly recommend that you look at their website!  Because it is an organization started by Africans, in Africa, I believe that they can really achieve great things eventually.  They have to start somewhere, right?


Thursday, July 28, 2011

Cynical view on Somalia? Or realistic? Even accurate?

Famine we could avoid
To pin the Somalia crisis on drought is wrong. This is an entirely predictable, man-made disaster

John Vidal  guardian.co.uk, 

Somali woman holds child
An internally displaced Somali woman fleeing from the drought gripping the Horn of Africa holds her child inside their makeshift shelter in Mogadishu. Photograph: Ismail Taxta/Reuters
A massive drought, as if out of nowhere, has settled over the Horn of Africa and the people fleeing to the camps are said to be "climate", "drought" or "environmental" refugees. The land, we are told by the international agencies rushing relief to the region, can no longer support its people.
Fifty or so years ago, the region had regular 10-year climatic cycles which were mostly followed by a major drought, and now the droughts are coming more frequently and are lasting longer. In the 1970s, say the pastoralists – the nomadic herders who move their cattle ceaselessly across the region in search of pasture – they started having droughts every seven years; in the 1980s they came about every five years and in the 1990s every two or three. Since 2000 there have been three major droughts and several dry spells, this one being not the worst, just the latest. "There is no doubt that it is hotter and drier now," said Leina Mpoke, a Maasai vet I met working on the Kenya-Ethiopia border that is now on the frontline of disaster.
There is also no doubt that climate change will make these areas of Africa harder to live in in future. But to pin this crisis on drought or climate change is wrong. This is an entirely predictable, traditional, man-made disaster, with little new about it except the numbers of people on the move and perhaps the numbers of children dying near the cameras. The 10 million people who the governments warn are at risk of famine this year are the same 10 million who have clung on in the region through the last four droughts and were mostly being kept alive by feeding programmes.
The fleeing Somalis seen on TV are the same people the UN warned about in 2008 when it said that one in six were at risk of starvation. Josette Sheeran, head of the UN's world food programme, appealed for $300m emergency aid this week – just as she did in 2008 when she told of "a silent tsunami [of hunger] gathering". And the same governments who were slow to respond to the emergency then are the ones who have been unwilling to help now.
Nor was the crisis unexpected. The rains failed early this year in Kenya and Ethiopia, and there has been next to none for two years now in Somalia. Aid agencies and governments have known for almost a year that food would run out by now. But it is only now, when the children begin to die and the cattle have been sold or died that the global humanitarian machine has moved in, with its TV shows, co-ordinated appeals and celebrities. Why did it not go earlier? Because it takes months to prepare properly for a disaster.
Just as in 2008, the war in Somalia is primarily responsible for the worst that is happening. As Simon Levine of the Overseas Development Institute says: "Wars don't kill many people directly but can kill millions through the way they render them totally vulnerable to the kinds of problems they should be able to cope with." In this case, he says, people have lost all their assets and can't access grazing grounds they need. But remember too, that Somalia has been made a war zone by the US-led "war on terror". It's our fault as much as anyone's.  (fact or opinion?)
But another, more insidious war has also been taking place across the region. This one is being waged by governments and businesses against the pastoralists. Over the years, they have been steadily marginalised and discriminated against by Ugandan, Kenyan and Ethiopian governments, and now they are further jeopardised by large-scale farming, the expansion of national parks, and game reserves and conservation.
For the politicians in Kampala, Nairobi or Addis, the lifestyle of these people seems archaic and outmoded. They are said to be outside mainstream national development, and to be pursuing a way of life that is in crisis and decline. So the politicians think little of taking away their dry season grazing grounds or blocking their traditional routes to pasture land. However, as seen in major international studies, the pastoralists produce more and better quality meat and generate more cash per hectare than "modern" Australian and US ranches.
Instead of starving the region's people of funds and then picking up the pieces in the bad years – as governments must do now – Britain, the EU, the US and Japan must help people adapt to the hotter, drier conditions they face. With better pumps and boreholes, better vaccination of cattle, help with education, food storage and transport, people can live well again.
This emergency will cost the west around $400m. If this money was put into long-term development instead of emergency aid and feeding programmes that keep people just above starvation, this tragedy could have been avoided. Instead, the world is almost certain to be here again in one or two years' time. Next time, though, there will be no excuses.

Interesting take on this crisis.  How sad that people are at risk of death, malnutrition, and starvation for so many years while not much long term help is being done.  Are we complacent?  Do we not care?  Should we care?  I think we should.