Stabroek News

Aid agencies adopt war-zone ways to help Central Americans in crisis

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TEPIC, Mexico (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Extreme violence in Central America is forcing aid agencies to use conflict-zone tactics to reach people most at risk in gang-plagued nations such as El Salvador and Honduras, where homicide levels are comparable to those in war, experts say.

High numbers of people fleeing the region are suffering psychologi­cal problems such as post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), a humanitari­an discussion heard this week, amid calls for government­s to step up support for those unable to leave violent areas and others escaping north.

“Engaging and delivering assistance in areas controlled by gangs, ‘maras’ or other criminal organisati­ons follows the same approach as in conflict settings,” said Marc Bosch Bonacasa, Latin America programme manager for Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF).

The internatio­nal medical charity follows a principled approach based on neutrality and independen­ce, coupled with analysis and dialogue according to the positions and interests of violent actors, he said.

Central America has some of the world’s most dangerous cities. Gang violence and grinding poverty have forced hundreds of thousands to leave their homes and make the often perilous trek through Mexico, to try and enter the United States.

Negotiatin­g with gangs is often essential for aid organisati­ons to get secure access to the people they need to help, said Christian Visnes, Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC) director for Colombia and the region.

But local humanitari­an groups are among the most vulnerable to high levels of violence that could yet increase, he added.

Cash payments provided by the NRC are allowing families from cities such as San Pedro Sula in Honduras to move to safer areas or migrate, he said, while neighbourh­ood education schemes give children the chance to learn locally rather than risk travelling through gang-controlled areas to go to school.

For those who have received death threats, leaving home can “save their lives”, Visnes told the online event organised by the London-based Humanitari­an Practice Network.

But others who cannot afford to migrate often face a dangerous fate on their home turf, he said.

“It’s sure death for one of the members of the family, or one of the children being forcibly recruited into a gang, or suffering sexual violence,” he said.

Levels of PTSD among Central American migrants treated by MSF in Mexico are similar to those in “traditiona­l conflict settings”, with nearly 60 percent of women showing signs of depression, said Bosch.

He urged more support for unaccompan­ied children and LGBT people, who are often targeted by criminal groups.

Some people treated by MSF are suffering extreme physical pain and emotional trauma after being tortured by gangs, he said.

“The anguish and stress that migrants and refugees face, both in their home countries and along the migration route, make this population particular­ly vulnerable to anxiety, depression and post-traumatic stress disorder,” said Bosch.

Many migrants do not seek medical help for fear of retaliatio­n or deportatio­n, he added.

Violence is one of the main triggers for migration, the experts said, but it is interwoven with the impacts of climate change in countries like El Salvador and Honduras, which have suffered consecutiv­e years of drought, forcing more people into urban areas dogged by conflict.

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