Oxfam reaction to the High-Level meeting in New York on Sahel
On the proposed ECOWAS force to Mali:
Mamadou Biteye Oxfam’s West Africa Regional Director said :
"In a region still in the midst of a serious food crisis, aid agencies are already trying to support 1.6 million people affected by insecurity in the north of Mali, as well as hundreds of thousands of others who have already fled abroad. Further fighting risks increasing humanitarian needs and forcing even more people to leave their homes. At the same time, any intensification of conflict could make it even more difficult for communities to access the aid they need.
“There is a major risk that military operations in northern Mali would make an already fragile humanitarian situation much worse. At a minimum, if such an operation is launched, all necessary steps must be taken to prevent civilian casualties and ensure respect for international humanitarian and human rights law."
On the long-term challenges for the region:
Sally Chin, Head of Oxfam’s New York office said:
“Sustainable peace and prosperity in the Sahel mean tackling the conditions of chronic poverty, hunger and exclusion – not just tackling harder security threats through the narrow lens of counter-terrorism.
“This year a potent cocktail of conflict, displacement and food crisis has led to widespread humanitarian suffering across the region. Insecurity and political unrest in Mali turned into a refugee emergency with over 400.000 people forced to flee their homes. Today tens of thousands are still living in camps with no intention of returning any time soon. The refugee response is only 22% funded. Their plight must be addressed and funding the refugee response ought to be first on the to-do list.
“At the same time, the Sahel region of West and Central Africa has just been through a food crisis leaving over 18 million in no less than 9 countries hungry for months. The fragile recovery that we are starting to see now with the arrival of this year’s harvests is only the beginning of what needs to be a sustained effort to address the chronic hunger that millions of people in the region face every year.
“Even in a ‘good’ year, around 20% of people living in the Sahel suffer from hunger. The recurrence of food crises is simply unacceptable: the region is locked into a permanent emergency and leaders must find long-term solutions to this chronic problem.
“They must reverse decades of under-investment in poor farmers to boost food production, establish food reserves and social protection schemes to help people cope when crises strike, and invest in adapting to climate change.
“As a new report released today shows, the impact of climate change on agriculture, livestock and fisheries may already be costing West Africa over $700 million per year, and is set to rise to over $2.2 billion per year by 2030. Fighting hunger in the Sahel also means tackling climate change, and fast."
Related links
Contact Information
For more information, please contact:
Louis Belanger (Oxfam International): +1 917 224 0834 / Twitter: https://twitter.com/louis_press
-
+80 countries pledged aid at last wk's #MaliConference, including an add'l $32M from the US http://t.co/WCukv0SV7x14 min 45 sec ago
-
Thx for speaking up for women: @MarsGlobal,#Mondelez & @Nestle have now moved from words 2 action http://t.co/laFtaWajFI #BehindTheBrands2 days 13 hours ago
-
UN agency and Slow Food group partner to boost livelihoods of small farmers http://t.co/l0YMT9yyk8 @SlowFoodHQ2 days 19 hours ago
-
RT @oxfamgbpress: Oxfam very relieved that Cyclone #Mahasen did not cause damage to vulnerable communities in Myanmar http://t.co/t2VwONPjs02 days 20 hours ago
-
RT @annamac33: The #ArmsTreaty can create a safer future for millions. Urge the US to sign! http://t.co/HRlNC8BcO32 days 20 hours ago
-
#FF Oxfam Global Ambassadors @KristinDavis @GaelGarciaB @driverminnie @liviafirth @baabamaal @HelenLMirren @BoseOfficial2 days 21 hours ago
-
#FF Oxfam Global Ambassadors @AnnieLennox @djimonhounsou @angeliquekidjo @firthcom @coldplay @RahulBose1 http://t.co/rXOrgldjlt2 days 21 hours ago
-
Thanks for speaking up for women! @MarsGlobal #Mondelez & @Nestle have moved from words to action http://t.co/pMvtbhesPh #BehindTheBrands2 days 22 hours ago
-
#FF the Oxfams! @IntermonOxfam @OxfamIndia @OxfamJapan @oxfamnovib @OxfamQuebec @Oxfam_mcm @OxfamItalia @oxfam_sol @oxfamfrance3 days 6 min ago
-
#FF the Oxfams! @OxfamIreland @oxfamcanada @OxfamAustralia @Oxfam_DE @OxfamAmerica @oxfamgb @oxfamnz @oxfamhongkong @oxfammexico3 days 10 min ago
-
Dismal levels of investment in agriculture a primary reason 1 in 8 people in the world are hungry http://t.co/orbRUxuVQo #govspendwatch3 days 14 hours ago
-
'A Jungle of Humanity - and Disorder', an interactive feature from @nytimes http://t.co/DxmATtGICV #SyriaCrisis #Zaatari3 days 16 hours ago
-
RT @benphillips76 How to Start Development’s Gutenberg Revolution http://t.co/DbieZs9UBZ #govspendwatch3 days 17 hours ago
-
Social protection, #genderequality & #climatechange crucial to tackling inequality http://t.co/mKqSIBcceM via @guardian #govspendwatch3 days 19 hours ago
-
RT @louis_belanger Starting to see Syrian refugees all over #Beirut On promenade, on Hamra, outside grocery stores, in parking lots #Syria3 days 19 hours ago
