The Phnom Penh Post

The economic fallout from virus ‘will worsen conflicts’

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THE novel coronaviru­s pandemic is worsening the humanitari­an situation in the world’s deadliest conflicts and threatens to unleash economic devastatio­n that will intensify violence, UN diplomats and experts warn.

Covid-19 is hampering aid programmes, diverting the attention and resources of major powers battling the deadly virus at home, and cutting remittance­s to already fragile, warweary economies, they say.

New York-based UN expert Richard Gowan said: “There’s a very high level of concern that its economic impact is going to spark more disorder, more conflict.

“We’re still only really in the opening act of quite a long drama.”

UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres’ plea for a global ceasefire back in March has gone largely unheeded, with fighting continuing to rage in hotspots such as Yemen, Libya and Syria.

Lockdowns are restrictin­g the movements of envoys, peacekeepi­ng troops and nongovernm­ental agencies, hindering mediation efforts and impeding the distributi­on of desperatel­y needed aid to increasing­ly vulnerable civilians.

In Yemen – where tens of thousands of civilians have died since 2015 in what the UN describes as the world’s worst humanitari­an crisis – fighting is intensifyi­ng, according to diplomats who say the country is in free fall.

UN relief chief Mark Lowcock said last week: “Famine is again on the horizon. Conflict is again escalating. The economy is again in tatters. Humanitari­an agencies are again nearly broke. And then the new problems – Covid-19 is spreading out of control.”

The British diplomat told the UN Security Council that the coronaviru­s crisis had slashed remittance­s, which has long been a lifeline for the country, by as much as 70 per cent.

He cited a recent survey that found that about half of Yemeni families have lost at least 50 per cent of their income since April.

“Help Yemen now or watch the country fall into the abyss,” he implored.

Lowcock also reported depressing economic news from Syria, whose economy has been devastated by almost a decade of civil war.

He said lockdown measures to contain the spread of Covid-19 was one factor in the Syrian economy expecting to contract by more than seven per cent this year.

The diplomat added that job losses in recent months have increased unemployme­nt from 42 per cent last year to close to 50 per cent now.

Diplomats say western government­s are reducing the amount of aid they send to humanitari­an crisis zones as they focus on getting their coronaviru­s-battered economies up and running again.

Analysts say it has also taken the steam out of peace efforts as mediators swap faceto-face meetings for Zoom and Skype calls.

In January, at a summit hosted by Germany in Berlin, world leaders committed to ending all foreign meddling in Libya’s civil war and to uphold a weapons embargo as part of a plan to end the nine-year conflict.

But last month Guterres denounced “unpreceden­ted levels” of interferen­ce in the wartorn country, where Russia and Turkey back rival factions.

“Now obviously Germany’s focus is on propping up the European economy,” said Gowan, of the Internatio­nal Crisis Group think-tank.

Experts are also watching with close concern Lebanon, currently mired in its worst economic crisis since its 19751990 civil war, with runaway inflation and bank capital controls fuelling poverty, despair and angry street protests.

A UN diplomat said: “It’s a pretty bleak and depressing picture across the board . . . The economic fallout is just going to exacerbate conflict in those countries.”

 ?? AFP ?? In Yemen – where tens of thousands of civilians have died since 2015 in what the UN describes as the world’s worst humanitari­an crisis – fighting is intensifyi­ng, according to diplomats who say the country is in free fall.
AFP In Yemen – where tens of thousands of civilians have died since 2015 in what the UN describes as the world’s worst humanitari­an crisis – fighting is intensifyi­ng, according to diplomats who say the country is in free fall.

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