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Top 10 Underreported Humanitarian Stories
of 2009
Once a year the international medical aid organization Doctors Without
Borders/Médecins Sans Frontiers (MSF) releases a list of ten
stories that received little media attention despite the fact that they
concern some of the most urgent humanitarian issues and crises in the
world. This year's list, their twelfth, focuses in part on the devastating
consequences of war and political unrest on civilian populations. It also
lists malnutrition and AIDS, both of which kill millions every
year.
- Democratic Republic of Congo: In 2009, extreme violence involving
rebel groups and government forces did not discriminate amongst its victims in
eastern Congo, where thousands of women, children, and men were raped, killed, and
forced from their homes. Here, cholera, measles, sleeping sickness, Ebola, and malnutrition
are symptoms of a broken health system. In an incident in the Masisi region,
civilians and aid workers—with the full support of the Congolese Ministry of
Health and a security guarantee—administering measles vaccinations were
caught in the fire of the Congolese army.
- Somalia: Health care indicators in Somalia are among the worst in terms
of immunization, maternal mortality, malnutrition, and access to basic health care services.
This, combined with severe drought and continued violence, make for miserable living conditions
for those Somalis who weren't among the 20,000 to 25,000 killed in fighting between
African Union- and UN-backed Transitional Federal Government forces and opposition groups since 2007.
- Sudan: The ongoing crisis in Darfur, coupled with a deteriorating situation in
southern Sudan marked by increased violence; outbreaks of meningitis, measles, cholera, and malaria; and lack of accessible health care, qualify
Sudan for the 2009 list.
- Sri Lanka: Innumerable civilian casualties have resulted from the decades-long
civil war in Sri Lanka. Tens of thousands of civilians were trapped for months in a war zone
reduced to a narrow strip of jungle and beach, with no aid and limited medical care, while the Sri Lankan army
fought the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam.
- Pakistan: Intense violence has gripped Pakistan as conflict between the Pakistani
army and armed opposition groups in the North-West Frontier Province (NWFP) and in the Federally Administered
Tribal Areas (FATA) has escalated and has displaced more than two million people, while numerous bombings in major Pakistani cities
killed hundreds and injured thousands. Throughout the country, people suffer from a general lack of health care, and Pakistan suffers from
one of the highest infant and maternal mortality rates in the region.
- Afghanistan: As a result of the escalation of war during 2009, Afghans are enduring increased
violence. Those in need of health care must travel hundreds of miles
through a war zone to seek medical care. Even if they make it to the hospital or health care structure,
they are not safe; in Afghanistan, the once clear distinction between armies, reconstruction, and development activities and
humanitarian aid has become confused—“health care has become part of the battlefield.”
- Yemen: Northern Yemen added a sixth war to the five ongoing. Hundreds of
thousands of civilians have been displaced and have no access to healthcare. The malnutrition rate amongst
children under five has skyrocketed, and the country is ill-equipped to absorb the tens of thousands of Somali refugees and Ethiopian
migrants who come to Yemen in search of a better life.
- Malnutrition: Fifty-five million children suffer from malnutrition and
an estimated 3.5 to 5 million children die each year from malnutrition-related causes—that is one
death every six seconds. While our understanding of malnutrition and its treatment (with therapeutic ready-to-use foods)
has greatly improved, lack of funding, inefficient spending, and violence combine to hamper relief efforts.
- AIDS: An estimated ten million people living with HIV/AIDS in the developing world are in urgent clinical
need of antiretroviral (ARV) therapy. HIV/AIDS is the leading cause of death among women of child-bearing age worldwide
and accounts for more than 40 percent of deaths of children under the age of five in the six highest HIV prevalence countries,
according to the World Health Organization (WHO). Eighty percent of all deaths in Botswana and two-thirds of all deaths in
Lesotho, Swaziland, and Zimbabwe are due to AIDS.
- Neglected Diseases: More than 400 million people are at risk for the neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) visceral leishmaniasis
(kala azar), sleeping sickness, Chagas disease, and Buruli ulcer. The first three are among the deadliest of all the NTDs, and all four
have been highlighted by the World Health Organization (WHO) as especially troublesome due to treatment and diagnostic tools that are old,
ineffective, or worse, simply non-existent, and with patient populations stuck in remote or insecure areas with little or no access to
health care. Even worse, research and development (R&D) of new medicines and diagnostics is woefully underfunded.
Source: MSF, 2009
Information Please® Database, © 2011 Pearson
Education, Inc. All rights reserved.
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