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Aid Groups Alarmed Over Delay in Somali Famine Relief

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  • Aid Groups Alarmed Over Delay in Somali Famine Relief

    Source: http://www.voanews.com/english/2009-11-10-voa52.cfm

    Aid Groups Alarmed Over Delay in Somali Famine Relief
    By Alan Boswell
    Nairobi
    10 November 2009

    Aid groups are raising increasing alarm over a delay in international food aid towards famine-stricken Somalia. Concerns over the misdirection of aid to an Islamic militant group has threatened contributions from the United States and other Western donors.

    The World Food Program says nearly half the Somali population is in need of emergency food relief.

    Ongoing lawlessness, plus a brutal drought has left much of central and southern Somalia with a severe food deficit, threatening millions of Somalis. Meanwhile, the United Nations says thousands more have been displaced by El-Ni?o related flash floods in the past week. The international body warns more than 280,000 additional Somalis could flee into neighboring countries if humanitarian conditions do not improve.

    But the WFP said Friday the food supply line is "effectively broken", as warehouses full of food intended for Somalia sit untouched on the Kenyan coast.

    Anti-government forces, including the extremist group al-Shabab, control much of the worst-affected areas in the war-torn nation, and U.S. authorities became concerned that portions of the famine relief aid were being siphoned off by the rebel groups.

    In light of U.S. anti-terrorism laws that prohibit aiding designated terrorist groups such as al-Shabab, the U.S. suspended food assistance while it reviewed its Somalia aid policy. It has since created a list of restrictions that all intermediary aid groups must follow to distribute U.S.-donated food in the region.

    A researcher at The Century Foundation in New York, Natalie Parke, says the regulations have put aid groups operating in the area in a near-impossible bind. "But the problem with these conditions is that they are extremely restrictive. Basically they would preclude humanitarian organizations from operating in al-Shabab controlled areas of Somalia, and that would include about 60 percent of the most needy people in Somalia," she said.

    Speaking to VOA, a senior U.S. official denies the aid pipeline is "broken," saying the State Department is continuously reviewing its Somali aid policy and the United States is working with local partners to get the relief programs running again.

    To Parke, the dual U.S. goals of subverting extremist forces in the region and preventing a humanitarian catastrophe have produced a conflicted national policy. "Specifically my concern is that our counter-terrorism strategy undermines one of the core principles of humanitarian aid, which is impartiality. Basically that means that humanitarian aid should be distributed based on need alone, not on politics or political affiliation," she said.

    The United States is the World Food Program's biggest donor. But other Western donors have expressed similar reservations about where foreign aid is ending up. A British official has said future donations will be contingent on the findings of an investigation into the alleged misuse of aid to the country.

    Besides the U.S. regulations, the the global economic downturn is also blamed for squeezing the pockets of donor countries. A recent United Nations report estimated the WFP will need $154 million in additional funds to meet the needs of the more than three-million Somalis under risk through April.

    The situation has deteriorated to the point that U.N. calculations now show that twice as many Somalis are in need of emergency assistance than was the case just one year ago. More than 1.5 million have been displaced since the beginning of 2007.

  • #2
    Re: Aid Groups Alarmed Over Delay in Somali Famine Relief

    US aid rules in Somalia are impossible, says UN envoy
    The US has imposed impossible conditions on aid agencies in Somalia, a UN envoy to the country says. Humanitarian co-ordinator Mark Bowden said the US was trying to ensure that aid was not diverted to Islamist insurgents fighting the government.

    The BBC story linked to above shows this issue is not going away.
    I have been trying to find a copy of the restrictions that the US DoS is trying to get the aid agencies to adhere to but, prima facie, any attempt to limit aid only to 'government' controlled areas in Somalia (which is how the restrictions were originally described in the media) is a non starter. The government, which the West hoped would become established, hold sway in a few pockets in Mogadishu which the AU troops hold. What is left of the capital's civilian population are leaving as more forces are entering into the city, presumably to expel the foreign troops and the government they are propping up.
    Any attempt to politices humanitarian aid will be disastrous as it only endangers those on the ground trying to deliver it, who have to be seen as neutral. While not covered in these reports, al-Shabab has previously stopped aid distribution because it was making it impossible for local farmers to sell what they had grown hence acting as a disincentive to self sufficiency.

    If anyone can provide a link to the US guidance I would be most grateful.

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