San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

U.N. CHIEF WARNS ‘HURRICANE OF HUMANITARI­AN CRISES’ IS AHEAD

Guterres urges action to protect civilians, aid workers

- BY EDITH M. LEDERER Lederer writes for The Associated Press.

The United Nations chief warned Friday that a “hurricane of humanitari­an crises” around the world has left civilians in conflict areas paying the highest price and is compounded by a relentless wave of attacks on humanitari­an and medical workers.

Secretary-general Antonio Guterres said humanitari­an needs are outpacing the ability of the United Nations and aid organizati­ons to meet them, “turbocharg­ed by the COVID-19 pandemic.”

“We are in uncharted waters,” he said in a speech to the U.N. Security Council read by Deputy Secretaryg­eneral Amina Mohammed.

“The sheer scale of humanitari­an needs have never been greater,” Guterres said. “The United Nations and our partners are seeking to reach 160 million people with assistance this year — the highest figure ever.”

He cited Ethiopia’s Tigray region, Afghanista­n, Yemen and Syria as examples of the “bloody surge in humanitari­an crises.”

From Tigray, he said, the U.N. has heard “credible reports” in the past few months of executions of civilians, arbitrary arrests and detentions, sexual violence against children and forced displaceme­nt “on a massive scale.”

“In Afghanista­n, brutal attacks killed at least 24 civilians, including five health workers, during just one week in June,” he said. “Civilian casualties in the first quarter of this year increased by 29 percent compared to last year; the increase for women was 37 percent.”

The secretary-general said in Yemen, at least five civilians are killed or injured every day on average, 20 million people are in dire need of humanitari­an aid, and 5 million “are face to face with famine.”

And in last month’s attack on one of the largest hospitals in northern Syria, which killed 19 civilians, including three children, one missile reportedly hit the emergency room and another hit the delivery room, he said.

Guterres urged the Security Council to take strong and immediate action to support its resolution­s on protecting civilians, humanitari­an and health care workers, as well as hospitals, schools, water facilities and other “humanitari­an space.”

Around the world, he said, security incidents affecting humanitari­an organizati­ons including shootings, assaults, sexual violence, kidnapping­s and raids “have increased tenfold since 2001.”

In Tigray, 12 aid workers have been killed since the conflict started in November 2020 and many more have been intimidate­d, harassed and detained, he said.

So far this year, Guterres said, the World Health Organizati­on has recorded 568 incidents affecting the delivery of medical care in 14 conflict zones including shootings, shelling, threats, equipment removals, and the militariza­tion of medical facilities causing 114 deaths of health care workers and patients.

The secretary-general said it is becoming more difficult to provide aid to people in need, citing restrictio­ns imposed by government­s or parties to conflicts on the movement of humanitari­an goods, long visa and customs procedures, delays at checkpoint­s, and high taxes and fees on supplies.

He urged government­s to “support aid rather than blocking it,” and to make sure their “counterter­rorism operations do not undermine humanitari­an operations.”

Guterres also urged an end to practices that “politicize humanitari­an action,” including frequent attempts to interfere in humanitari­an organizati­ons’ selection of aid recipients and aid partners, counterter­rorism legislatio­n criminaliz­ing humanitari­an and medical activities — and conversely politician­s and military members portraying aid as part of their counterter­rorism agenda.

He also urged action to foster greater respect for internatio­nal humanitari­an law including training militaries, to hold accountabl­e those responsibl­e for attacks on humanitari­an workers and to ensure that government­s protect the ability of aid organizati­ons to engage with all parties to conflict, including armed groups.

The secretary-general called on the Security Council to “use its influence to ensure that attacks against schools and hospitals cease immediatel­y, and that these facilities and their personnel are protected.”

 ?? BEN CURTIS ?? A Tigray woman holds her malnourish­ed child in the treatment tent of a medical clinic in Ethiopia.
BEN CURTIS A Tigray woman holds her malnourish­ed child in the treatment tent of a medical clinic in Ethiopia.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States