MSF AustraliaVolunteerSupport usInformationContact
InformationPress releases
20 December 2007


MEdecins Sans FrontiEres Releases 10th Annual “Top Ten”
Most Underreported Humanitarian Stories of 2007

Sydney/New York People struggling to survive violence, forced displacement, and disease in the Central African Republic (CAR), Somalia, Sri Lanka, and elsewhere often went underreported in the news this year and much of the past decade, according to the 10th annual list of the “Top Ten” Most Underreported Humanitarian Stories, released today by the international medical humanitarian organisation Médecins Sans Frontières.

The 2007 list also highlights the plight of people living through other forgotten crises, in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Colombia, Myanmar, Zimbabwe, and Chechnya, where the displacement by war of millions continues.  It also focuses on the ongoing toll of medical catastrophes like tuberculosis (TB) and childhood malnutrition.  

“In the mainstream media in countries like Australia and New Zealand, it is rare to hear in-depth analysis of the plight of people affected by various conflicts around the world”, said Philippe Couturier, Executive Director of Médecins Sans Frontières Australia.  “But all over the world, there are millions of people who are vulnerable to disease, conflict or displacement, who lack medical care and shelter, and who the media spotlight often neglects.”

Médecins Sans Frontières began producing the “Top Ten” list in 1998 when a devastating famine in southern Sudan went largely unreported in the U.S. media. Drawing on MSF’s emergency medical work, the list seeks to generate greater awareness of the magnitude and severity of crises that are not always reflected in media accounts.  Often, media attention is critical for generating and improving responses.

Childhood malnutrition is an example.  Increasing coverage of effective methods to treat malnourished children with nutrient rich ready-to-use foods is generating a growing awareness of the need for changes in international food aid policies.

The DRC and Colombia, both wracked by ongoing civil conflict and massive internal displacement of civilians, have dominated the list over the past decade, each appearing a total of nine times. The humanitarian consequence of war in Chechnya has appeared eight times. Somalia has appeared seven times, most recently because renewed fighting centered in Mogadishu in 2007 has killed thousands of people and forced hundreds of thousands to flee their homes, only to endure disease and extremely precarious living conditions.

According to Andrew Tyndall, publisher of the online media-tracking journal, “The Tyndall Report,” the countries and contexts highlighted by MSF on this year’s list accounted for just 18 minutes of coverage on the three major U.S. television networks’ nightly newscasts from January through November 2007. This figure does not include coverage of Myanmar or tuberculosis; both generated significant media attention, but very little of it focused on the medical humanitarian aspects of either context. Chechnya, Sri Lanka, and CAR—where many villages were burned to the ground in fighting between government forces and rebels and tens of thousands of people fled into inhospitable forests seeking safety—were never mentioned.

Coverage of TB was somewhat of an exception in 2007, when an Atlanta man was diagnosed with a multidrug-resistant (MDR) strain of the disease. However, increasing levels of MDR-TB globally, including extensively drug-resistant (XDR) TB, and alarming rates of people with HIV/AIDS co-infected with TB, received little attention.

“Local angles of international stories can often drive coverage,” said Couturier. “But all too frequently, the people who have themselves experienced war, displacement, disease, malnutrition or epidemics are the people who remain virtually invisible to the outside world.”


Top Ten Most Underreported Humanitarian Stories of 2007


> Displaced Fleeing War in Somalia Face Humanitarian Crisis
> Political and Economic Turmoil Sparks Health-Care Crisis in Zimbabwe
> Expanded Use of Nutrient Dense Ready-to-Use Foods Crucial for Reducing Childhood    Malnutrition
> Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis Spreads As New Drugs Go Untested
> Civilians Increasingly Under Fire in Sri Lankan Conflict
> Conditions Worsen in Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo
> Living Precariously in Colombia’s Conflict Zones
> Humanitarian Aid Restricted in Myanmar
> Civilians Caught Between Armed Groups in Central African Republic
> As Chechen Conflict Ebbs, Critical Humanitarian Needs Still Remain


For more information, contact Sally McMillan on 0447 482 379, (02) 8570 2611 or sally.mcmillan@sydney.msf.org


PDF attachment of the Top 10 Most Unreported Humanitarian Stories in 2007Download PDF version - Top Ten Most Underreported Humanitarian Stories of 2007

 

Subscribe to our enewsletter MSF Podcasts About MSF Special Features Media room Donate My MSF Overseas Field Work - Recruitment info evenings E-cards