5.02.2006

the worst i've even seen...

I saw this article on CNN today and am again saddened by the world in which we live. The headlines these days are smeared with the Divinci Code and the NFL Draft, but half a world away, none of this matters. People are dying. Here I am, no better. I live in a nice house. We own a nice car. I ride a $1200 bike to work every day. I just ate a banana with peanut butter on it and am still hungry. Now I'm drinking coffee from Starbucks. What have I done to help...? Nothing.

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) -- A senior U.N. humanitarian official said Tuesday he saw Somali refugees living in "the worst conditions I have ever seen" during a tour of the Horn of Africa.

Kjell Magne Bondevik, the U.N. special humanitarian envoy for the Horn of Africa, said that governments must do more to ensure drought and hunger are eradicated in the long-term.

At least 7.5 million people are suffering from the worst drought in a decade in parts of Somalia, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Kenya and Djibouti. Cattle are dying and food supplies to 18 million people are in jeopardy.

"It was especially moving to visit the country where several thousand ... displaced were living under the worst conditions I have ever seen," Bondevik said of his visit to lawless Somalia. He added, however, that Somalis want to "reconcile and rebuild their economy."

Somalia has had no effective government since 1991, when warlords ousted a dictatorship and then turned on each other, carving the nation of an estimated 8.2 million people into a patchwork of fiefdoms. A transitional federal government that was formed following peace talks in neighboring Kenya is struggling to assert its authority.

Bondevik also said he could not confirm reports that 90,000 tons of food aid were being left to rot in Eritrean warehouses. The Eritrean government, he said, made it clear that "the discussion about this was closed. The warehouses were closed, that the government has the keys."

But he said he has asked Eritrea to issue a report on the matter.

In the past year Eritrea has rejected or suspended the operations of several aid agencies. The government previously has accused some foreign agencies of sympathizing with Eritrea's hostile neighbor, Ethiopia, where aid workers also are trying to combat the effects of the region's five-year drought.

Eritrea gained independence from Ethiopia in 1993 after a 30-year guerrilla war. The two fought a 1998-2000 border war that ended with a fragile peace agreement. Efforts to demarcate their border under the terms of their 2000 peace deal have stalled after Ethiopia objected to the awarding the town of Badme and other territories to Eritrea.

1 comment:

Sander Chan said...

This Sunday I will do a short talk in our Church about the need for action on issues of poverty and hunger in particular. This month we try to raise awareness for global and local action. One of the things we want to do is to organize a fundraising dinner for the Village Enterprise Foundation (VEF). The VEF provides microgrants in Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania to support and to start small business. I hope that we can contribute to structurally enhanced living conditions.
I thought you might want to know that we are trying to get things started at Zolder50. Thank you for helping to build our community in Amsterdam.