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Attacking Humanitarians As Strategy

by Christopher Albon on July 29, 2008

unicef-armored-car.jpgThe Jamestown Foundation has a new article by Sunguta West on the targeting of aid agencies in Somalia. Aid groups in the country are increasingly being attacked and humanitarian operations have largely halted due to security concerns. The dangers of aid work come with the territory, but while most attacks against aid workers worldwide are robberies or mistaken identity, the attacks in Somalia, for political reasons, purposely strike against humanitarians.

According to Shaykh Muhammad: “The UN relief agencies took part in the war that resulted in the defeat of the Islamic Courts Union by giving arms, money and fuel to the forces ranged against the mujahideen… I urge the mujahideen to make relief agencies their main target because they are assisting the enemy. This struggle has started and is yet to be accomplished (Codka Nabadda Radio [The Voice of Peace], July 14; Garowe Online, July 14). [Emphasis Mine]

Insurgencies are contests for the minds and will of the population. In the eyes of insurgents, humanitarian organizations are competitors for the support of local populations. Thus, humanitarian NGOs and IGOs threaten to lose their century old, sacred position of neutrality.

Whether we like it or not, in insurgencies nobody is neutral.

Christopher Albon is a Ph.D. candidate specializing in armed conflict, public health, human security, and health diplomacy.

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{ 1 comment }

1 Rosanne Todd November 12, 2008 at 2:39 pm

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