The National - News

We need to resolve humanitari­an crises in innovative ways

- HASSAN DAMLUJI Hassan Damluji is head of Middle East relations at the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

Amassive truck bomb was detonated outside the United Nations compound in Baghdad on August 19, 2003, which killed the head of the UN mission, Sergio Vieira de Mello, and 21 other people. This attack robbed the world of many brave humanitari­an leaders. It also served as a reminder of how individual­s risk their lives to serve humanity. To commemorat­e these brave and selfless people, we mark this date every year as World Humanitari­an Day.

Fourteen years on, as another World Humanitari­an Day draws near, our region is still at the top of minds when it comes to humanitari­an emergencie­s. Arab League member countries serve as homes to nearly two-thirds of the 100 million people around the world needing humanitari­an assistance. Many donors have come forward to generously help sufferers, but money alone isn’t enough. It’s true that humanitari­an spending has increased from just 2 per cent of the total aid in 1980 to more than 10 per cent in 2015. However, there is a limit to how much funds can be raised.

Increasing­ly, donors are looking for innovative solutions that can bring about a change in their ability to support those in need. Often, the accelerati­ng humanitari­an crises means that people don’t always have the time to test new approaches. Neverthele­ss, I see three such initiative­s that might help improve the quality of the humanitari­an response in the Middle East.

First, most refugee population­s in Jordan and Lebanon are living outside organised camps, in overcrowde­d or informal accommodat­ion. Many of them lack running water and sewage systems. That means waste is not properly disposed of, which greatly increases the risk of disease, especially diarrhoea that can sometimes prove fatal for children. Proper water and sewage systems are unlikely to be built in the near future, especially for people who are expected to leave one day. Thankfully, there have been several innovation­s in the design of toilets and waste collection, spurred by donors working to improve the lives of poor slum dwellers, who live in a similar environmen­t on the fringes of large cities. Efforts are under way to set up, on a mass scale, toilets that use less water and dispose of waste hygienical­ly without a sewer system. Meanwhile, well-organised and hygienic waste collection and management services can provide business opportunit­ies and jobs for those with little income. We need to make sure that these solutions are available to refugee and host communitie­s in our region, so that refugees can live better lives.

The second one sounds simple – it’s cash. Donors have realised that often it’s the people living in emergency situations who know best exactly what they need. Giving them the purchasing power, rather than the material, allows them to meet their needs most efficientl­y, while also stimulatin­g the local economy.

The problem is that handing out wads of currency notes in a war zone can cause security issues and even put the people at risk. So digital financial services are needed to transfer the money directly to the right people. This can then lead to those accessing other similar services, such as micro-loans. In this area too, humanitari­an aid can benefit from efforts to bring mobile banking to the hundreds of millions of people living in poverty and do not have access to a traditiona­l bank account, but do have access to a mobile phone. Systems and protocols have now been created that can reliably link payment systems and other financial services to hard-to-reach population­s. Implementi­ng and integratin­g these systems is now an important priority for donors

As another World Humanitari­an Day draws near, our region is still at the top of minds when it comes to humanitari­an emergencie­s

and refugee hosting countries in the Middle East.

Finally, it’s about keeping cool. That’s not an easy thing for anyone in this region, especially during the scorching summer months. But for vaccines it’s even harder, as they need to be stored at a specific temperatur­e. If they freeze, or heat up, they lose their efficacy. In very remote areas, such as the mountains of Yemen, that is especially difficult, because there is no electricit­y grid and fuel needed for generators is scarce.

As a result, while millions of children in Yemen are being vaccinated, it is not known how many are actually protected against disease. This is another problem that many poor countries suffer from, and scientists have been trying hard to figure out a way address this problem.

Using technology originally developed for Nasa’s space programme, a new generation of super-insulated “cold chain equipment” (as vaccine storage is known) is able to keep vaccines at consistent­ly low temperatur­es for up to 35 days with just one load of ice. A similar device, fitted with portable solar panels, can maintain those low temperatur­es indefinite­ly, regardless of the outside temperatur­e.

These efforts indicate that our communitie­s can leverage innovation­s designed for more long-term developmen­t projects to alleviate human suffering.

Fourteen years after the attack on the UN building in Baghdad, our region faces unpreceden­ted levels of humanitari­an crises. It’s critical that we work to find new solutions to reduce that suffering.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates