The Star Late Edition

Killing of aid workers on the rise

-

DAKAR: Working in conflict zones for years does not make it any less frightenin­g when armed militiamen storm the hospital you run, says Colette Gadenne of medical charity Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF).

This happened three times in three weeks from May to June in Central African Republic (CAR), where Gadenne is head of the mission. In one case, the fighters fired 21 rounds before leaving.

The country is a particular­ly bad case, but aid workers worldwide are facing an increase in raids, killings and kidnapping­s as fighters flout the internatio­nal laws meant to protect humanitari­ans, aid groups said.

This has changed the way agencies operate, forcing staff at all levels to grow accustomed to a constant level of danger and hone skills such as negotiatin­g with armed groups, experts said.

“It is scary. Even if you have experience, even when you know you have a good network, it remains scary,” Gadenne said.

Nearly 140 aid workers were killed last year worldwide, a 23% rise over 2016, according to data released this week by independen­t research group Humanitari­an Outcomes.

South Sudan was the most dangerous country for the third year in a row, while CAR rose to fourth on the list, after Syria and Afghanista­n, following a three-fold rise in attacks.

The dangers limit the areas aid workers can enter, leaving more and more people without help, said Sofie Garde Thomle, head of the UN’s Office for the Co-ordination of Humanitari­an Affairs (Ocha) in West and Central Africa.

“Most importantl­y, the lack of access means we see a much higher loss of lives,” she said.

“If you look back 10 or 20 years ago, it was completely different,” she added, speaking before World Humanitari­an Day yesterday, a tribute to aid workers who risk their lives.

Today there is less respect for the rules of war, the internatio­nal laws that protect people in conflict zones who are not fighting, Thomle said.

MSF staff in CAR are in constant contact with various militias to negotiate access and give help to those who need it, she said. But the staff fell victim to 40 attacks in the country last year.

“We do a lot of discussion with armed groups… and it didn’t work,” Gadenne said.

Justin Byworth, humanitari­an director for global charity World Vision, was working in South Sudan in May when nine colleagues were kidnapped and held for five days. Ocha was able to negotiate their release. “I was very conscious every day of what they were going through,” Byworth said. “You’re scenario-planning very rapidly.”

In recent years the charity has spent more money on security and staff care and focused on providing local psychosoci­al support, he said. Sometimes staff hail from conflict zones themselves or have had multiple postings in dangerous places, and each incident can trigger memories of past traumatic events. – Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa