Orlando Sentinel

Front-line aid workers: ‘Hands tied’

Lack of resources puts nations in crisis at greater virus risk

- By Cara Anna

JOHANNESBU­RG — The coronaviru­s is exposing an uncomforta­ble inequality in the billion-dollar system that delivers life-saving aid for countries in crisis: Most money that flows from the U.S. and other donors goes to internatio­nal aid groups instead of local ones.

Now local aid workers are exposed on the pandemic’s front lines with painfully few means to help the vulnerable communitie­s they know so well.

Often lacking protective equipment, the groups are carrying a bigger burden than ever as COVID-19 adds to the already vast challenges of conflict, drought and hunger in places like Somalia and Afghanista­n.

At times, they tell communitie­s they have nothing to give.

“Our hands are tied,” a South Sudanese aid leader, Gloriah Soma, told an online event last month.

She described foreign aid workers being evacuated early in the pandemic or working from home as many feared infection.

“Is this a humanitari­an response?” she asked, saying she hopes the crisis will spark more help “at this critical moment.”

Her country can hardly bear another disaster: A five-year civil war killed nearly 400,000 people, and hunger stalks half the population.

The world’s most precarious regions are long accustomed to the sight of internatio­nal aid organizati­ons, often managed by expats. Now some of those foreign workers are questionin­g their roles amid the reckoning over racial injustice in the United States and elsewhere.

At times criticized as “white saviors,” some say local partners should be given more responsibi­lity — and money.

A local group can do more with it, Soma said. She asserted that $100,000 could help over 10,000 people, while the same amount to an internatio­nal group will only pay one or two staff, “and that’s it.”

Recognizin­g the problem, major global donors including the U.S., Germany and Japan and humanitari­an groups had pledged to give at least one-quarter of internatio­nal aid money to local partners as directly as possible by this year.

But just over 2% reached them directly last year, according to a report by the U.K.-based Developmen­t Initiative­s last month.

“COVID is a horrible tragedy, but it’s going to force us to work differentl­y,” the United Nations humanitari­an agency’s director of humanitari­an financing, Lisa Carty, has said. U.N. leaders are discussing “how to make sure money moves more quickly” to frontline responders.

One-quarter of the $1 billion allocated by U.N. country-based funds went to local aid organizati­ons last year, Carty said, “but I think we all agree that we want to do better.”

And those funds manage just a small fraction of overall aid money.

Most goes to U.N. agencies, while local aid groups are often seen as subcontrac­tors of those agencies and internatio­nal organizati­ons.

Tracking where the money goes remains a challenge.

Now some pandemic-hit donor countries are reducing humanitari­an aid — meaning even less money is trickling down to people on the front lines.

In Somalia, where the al-Qaida-linked al-Shabab extremist group remains a deadly threat, local aid groups “are able to reach and deliver aid in places where access is difficult.

Unfortunat­ely, little COVID-19 funding has been directly allocated” to them,” said Amy Croome, Oxfam’s communicat­ions manager there.

In South Sudan, a survey of 19 local organizati­ons found 58% had lost at least

half their funding because of the pandemic.

Many are ill-prepared for COVID-19.

“People believe the disease is widespread across the country, but there’s very limited testing capacity,” said Jeff Okello, who leads The Health Support Organizati­on in South Sudan.

The group’s limited sup

ply of personal protective equipment is left over from the recent Ebola outbreak in neighborin­g eastern Congo, he said.

Most parts of South Sudan are reached only by local organizati­ons, he said.

Now the pandemic has worsened everything. “I think we have over 30 letters written by different

communitie­s across the country asking us to help them,” Okello said.

His response: “If we get the resources, we will come.”

He pointed out that internatio­nal aid groups have the benefit of medical evacuation if workers get infected, while local aid groups must “survive on their own.”

Several other South Sudanese local aid leaders said they’ve cut staff or restricted work in communitie­s where they’re often the only source of help.

“We always say ‘Thank God’ for the little we get, but it’s not what we used to get,” said James Keah, who leads UNIDO South Sudan.

His group received

$400,000 this year from the U.N.’s South Sudan Humanitari­an Fund for health services

With few other means of substantia­l support, some 100 field staffers have left and services in several regions have stopped.

Local communitie­s are told, “You just have to cope with it,” Keah said.

 ?? CHARLES ATIKI LOMODONG/AP ?? Trainees demonstrat­e social distancing Aug. 18 at a session for community health workers conducted by the national NGO Health Link in South Sudan.
CHARLES ATIKI LOMODONG/AP Trainees demonstrat­e social distancing Aug. 18 at a session for community health workers conducted by the national NGO Health Link in South Sudan.

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