Sunday Star-Times

World must act when sleeping dogs don’t lie

- Ritesh Shah Senior lecturer in comparativ­e and internatio­nal education at the University of Auckland

This week we witnessed Ukraine being attacked by Russia from all directions, with a gasp of collective horror emanating from all of us in the ‘‘West’’. For years, though, we ignored the fact that Ukraine was a country in conflict; one of the forgotten crises of the world.

Since 2014, the east of Ukraine has been locked in a struggle between the Ukrainian army and separatist rebels who took control of the Donetsk and Luhansk regions. Regions on either side of this border became immersed in a protracted conflict, with government forces and separatist rebels both trying to assert their authority over these contested lands.

Between 2014 and 2021, it was estimated by the UN Office for the Coordinati­on of Humanitari­an Affairs that nearly 3400 civilians died and at least 7000 had been injured, many by shelling or land mines. The conflict also led to the internal displaceme­nt of approximat­ely 1.5 million people on either side of the border, many who ended up in refugee camps on the outskirts of cities like Kharkiv or Kyiv.

Until recently though, much of the world let this humanitari­an crisis, with nearly 3.2 million in need, slip off the radar. As of December 2021, for example, only 56 per cent of the humanitari­an funding required for Ukraine had been committed by the internatio­nal community, and this despite the fact that underpinni­ng this conflict was a wider geopolitic­al battle between Russia and Nato.

Those living in this contested region, though, could not as easily forget the threat of war. In 2018, I travelled to some of the villages on the government­controlled side of the zone. I vividly remember walking into a school in Luhanskoe to speak to its principal. As we walked down the wide, echoing hallway to her office, the walls suddenly shook, and there was a loud, distant boom.

She turned to me, rather nonchalant­ly and said: ‘‘shelling’’. She estimated the explosion was about 2km from where we were standing.

She went on to describe how, since the conflict started, her school had come under attack on three occasions, with classroom windows being blown out each time. In one instance, a wall in the school was destroyed. Luckily students were not in school at any of these times. As of 2019, 750 educationa­l facilities on both sides of the contact line had been destroyed or damaged due to hostilitie­s, interrupti­ng the schooling of children for months in some instances.

Even more concerning are the psychologi­cal scars this prolonged conflict has left on children. ‘‘When the conflict came to our village, my family and I were trapped at home with heavy shelling going on outside,’’ one mother in the village of Valujske recalled. ‘‘We sheltered in our basement over the harsh winter and intense shelling, without heating and water for several months.’’

A few years later, and with tears welling in her eyes, she said the situation had had a profound effect on her and her children.

‘‘We’ve lost our sense of hope for the future and become quite depressed. My son became quite short-tempered, aggressive, and

New Zealand must also do its part and be a more welcoming place for some of those seeking asylum and permanent resettleme­nt.

withdrawn with me and the rest of the family. He lost any ability to communicat­e with others and when he does speak, he only talks about the war.’’

Sadly, stories like this are commonplac­e across the buffer zone. At least 378,000 children needed protection and assistance on Ukraine’s front lines before Russia’s invasion began. Now, this will extend to millions more across the entire nation, with many seeking refuge in Western Europe.

As we witness Ukraine under attack now, let’s ensure the internatio­nal humanitari­an response is commensura­te to the scale and scope of need, unlike the past. Neighbouri­ng states with the support of the internatio­nal community must provide these refugees with access to shelter, food and water, and education. In humanitari­an crises, education is a life-saving and sustaining need, but remains poorly funded.

To avoid the mistakes of the Syrian refugee crisis, a system will need to be in place for asylum-seekers – one which spreads the responsibi­lity for receiving these refugees across the entire European Union. New Zealand must also do its part and be a more welcoming place for some of those seeking asylum and permanent resettleme­nt.

Lastly, while Ukraine may no longer be an invisible crisis, let’s remember there are many other crises at present that as an internatio­nal community we pay little heed to until the sleeping dog awakes.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand