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Dec 2004 |
2004 THE YEAR IN REVIEW
By Rowan Gillies MD, President, MSF International Council + Marine Buissonnière,
MSF Secretary-General
The past twelve months have been turbulent by any standard. The
tragedy in Darfur, Sudan unraveled before our eyes, growing worse as the months
went by... While Darfur finally started receiving public attention by mid-2004,
many other crises causing immense human suffering remained hidden from view, rarely
mentioned in headlines.
The targeting of humanitarian aid workers for political gain
is, unfortunately, not a new phenomenon. However, the current "war on terror"
in all of its guises makes maintaining our neutral and independent position an
ongoing struggle we cannot afford to lose.
Karima, an elderly woman by Sudanese standards, sat in the rain outside an
Médecins Sans Frontières clinic in western Darfur, Sudan, when Médecins
Sans Frontières staff first saw her. She was sitting, exhausted, in the
mud and her legs were covered with her own excrement, suffering from diarrhea
and subsequent dehydration. The clinic was closed. Together, with the help of
a Sudanese nurse, Médecins Sans Frontières medical volunteers took
her to the nearby hospital, washed and fed her, and found a relative to look after
her. She stayed at the hospital for only one night, became rehydrated and left
for her own shelter the next day.
Karima’s desperate situation was not unique. Millions around the world
face the same suffering and feeling of abandonment. Yet she ref lects the foundation
on which Médecins Sans Frontières’ work is based, every day,
in hundreds of projects around the world. Each patient is an individual deserving
care simply because they have none and need it. Every individual deserves assistance
that helps restore personal dignity. Our work, whatever the context, can be simplified
into thousands of these individual interactions taking place between Médecins
Sans Frontières care givers and our patients. Our aim is clear. Assist
those who need medical help now.
The past twelve months have been turbulent by any standard. The tragedy in
Darfur, Sudan unraveled before our eyes, growing worse as the months went by.
Extreme violence against civilians led to a massive displacement of more than
a million people. Access to this whole population was denied and then restricted
for months, with only occasional but ineffective protests from the international
community as their condition deteriorated. The scant attention given to the crisis
until recently was due partially to a desire not to upset the North-South Sudan
peace process – effectively sacrificing a group of the country’s civilians
for future stability. At the time of this writing, although the humanitarian response
to the crisis has improved dramatically, the presence of food and medical aid
has done little to end the fear and abuse that haunt the people of Darfur.
While Darfur finally started receiving public attention by mid- 2004, many
other crises causing immense human suffering remained hidden from view, rarely
mentioned in headlines. The forgotten war taking place in the Democratic Republic
of the Congo continued to claim lives, both directly through violence and more
insidiously because of displacement and disease. Increasing violence in Uganda
also sent thousands on the run, but made little impact on the outside world. Médecins
Sans Frontières' independence makes it possible for us to go to these “neglected”
crisis zones and help those who have been forgotten. While we cannot provide assistance
to all of those who need it, our presence in nearly 80 countries provides aid
for many of the most vulnerable and allows us to speak out on what we witness
there.
Neutrality under attack
The murders of our five colleagues in Afghanistan’s Badghis province on
2 June 2004 were a shock to the movement and to the world. The tragedy highlighted
both the dedication of our national staff and volunteers and the increasingly
difficult and dangerous environment in which they work. The decision to withdraw
from Afghanistan was a tragic consequence of MSF becoming a target. While Médecins
Sans Frontières feels a great sense of frustration and sadness at diminishing
aid to people who need it desperately, there are limits to the risks the organization
can accept.
The targeting of humanitarian aid workers for political gain is, unfortunately,
not a new phenomenon. However, the current “war on terror” in all
of its guises makes maintaining our neutral and independent position an ongoing
struggle we cannot afford to lose.
Although the entire Médecins Sans Frontières movement was relieved
when volunteer Arjan Erkel was released in April 2004 after 20 months in captivity,
the North Caucasus’ insecurity remains a daily reality for the people of
the region. Effective assistance is severely curtailed through an atmosphere of
violence and intimidation, compounded by the impunity shown for attacks on humanitarian
workers. The difficulties we face pale in comparison to the daily suffering of
the people we try to help. Humanitarians will always be needed who will seek out
and assist people in crisis, whatever the political framework of the day, regardless
of the obstacles placed between them and the populations they seek to help. The
ongoing struggle to reach those who most need assistance and the challenges involved
in getting help to them are also discussed in this report’s pages.
When people are “sacrificed”
Today there are plenty of crises and conflict zones requiring humanitarian assistance.
While a few are caused by natural disasters or epidemics sparked by natural conditions,
most are man-made. The need for humanitarian action usually arises when those
in power refuse to uphold commitments they have made to protect those living within
their borders or to shoulder responsibilities promised under national or international
law.
While action can be linked to cases of violent conflict, humanitarian action
can also be called for when states allow the most vulnerable to be excluded from
needed protection or care. The growing use of cost-recovery programs is an illustration
of this type of problem. Related user fees require payment to obtain health care
in many countries – a system that has proven exclusionary and dangerous
for the most vulnerable groups. Today Médecins Sans Frontières is
trying to eliminate all user fee requirements involving its own programs. Whether
or not Médecins Sans Frontières should address this issue at the
advocacy level is currently the subject of an internal debate within the movement.
When civilians are not protected or are actively harmed by governments or other
actors, it is the role of humanitarians first to respond to their needs but also
to expose the conditions and lives of those who are sacrificed – and to
remain in solidarity with these people. Such situations not only occur in Africa,
Asia and Latin America. Civilians escaping from Darfur and other crisis zones
have been met with harsh treatment in Europe when they tried to gain political
asylum or immigrate.
Urging expanded treatment
Humanitarian action is called for in silent wars as well. The death toll caused
by treatable infectious diseases such as HIV/AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis (TB)
remains staggering, especially in the poorest countries. During the past few years
there has been a paradigm shift in the “accepted” thinking on infectious
diseases. Patient treatment is becoming the focus as opposed to economic or public
health mores.
The World Health Organization (WHO) and many governments and donor agencies
now agree with Médecins Sans Frontières that it is unethical to
keep giving chloroquine to patients suffering from highly resistant strains of
malaria. In the same way, it is no longer considered ethical to allow the 30 million
people currently infected with HIV/AIDS to die due to lack of treatment. Before
2002, WHO and donor governments used what could be called a “public health”
approach on HIV/AIDS treatment in poor countries. They believed it was too difficult
and expensive to treat people with HIV/AIDS using antiretroviral (ARV) drugs,
so the focus was placed on prevention programs – essentially sentencing
millions to an early death.
Civil society action during the last three years has caused the prices of ARV
medications to plummet. The WHO and the US government have professed desires to
treat millions of HIV-positive people and close to 500,000 people in developing
countries are now getting treatment. This change is no doubt a success, but the
struggle is far from over. Major obstacles are keeping effective treatment out
of reach for many who need it, as another article in this report explains. Other
diseases, such as TB, have not received the same strong political push to improve
and expand treatment. An essay included here describes how current TB diagnostic
tools and treatment fail many hard-to-treat patients, often the kind we see in
our own programs, because their care is considered too difficult to provide. The
Campaign for Access to Essential Medicines, which has had so much success with
reducing the price of HIV/AIDS drugs, is now advocating for an urgent global approach
to the lack of research and development on TB.
Whether we are working directly with patients like Karima or advocating for
policy change on their behalf, principles are essential to Médecins Sans
Frontières’ work. Impartiality allows us to assess who are the most
vulnerable, the most excluded, so that we can make practical and ethical decisions
about our interventions and actions. Independence and neutrality are tools we
use to enable us to gain access to these people and create the trust essential
to help those who have been betrayed, attacked or neglected by others. These principles
also allow us to speak out on what our teams witness in the field, perhaps helping
to bring about change, but certainly raising the question, is such suffering necessary?
In the end, however, our goal is simple: to treat other humans with respect when
they are at their most vulnerable and to do so in a pragmatic and palpable manner.
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