Three Humanitarian Challenges for Africa in 2018
When a cholera epidemic threatened to overwhelm
Somalia's heath-care system last year, a coordinated response by local,
regional, and international organizations contained the crisis and saved
countless lives. Somalia and other African states facing natural or
manmade disasters this year should seek to build on that success.
NAIROBI – In mid-2017, when a cholera outbreak in Somalia threatened to overwhelm local hospitals, health experts feared the worst.
With crippling drought, malnutrition, and poverty already endemic, an
outbreak of deadly diarrhea seemed destined to paralyze the fragile
state. But, despite the dire predictions, institutional paralysis was
avoided. Although hundreds died and many more became sick,
the collective response managed by governments, NGOs, and local
communities, including the national Red Crescent Societies supported by
the Red Cross movement, contained the disease.
Somalia’s experience
gives me great hope for Africa’s future. But it also serves as a
reminder that local capacity is easily inundated during times of crisis.
While some parts of Africa have become self-sufficient in terms of
public health, others continue to lean heavily on global aid. For these
areas, partnership is the best means of minimizing risks.
In particular, three
key challenges this year are likely to pose the severest tests of
Africa’s ability to manage humanitarian crises.
The first challenge
is violence in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Last year, conflict
in the DRC’s central Kasai region displaced some 1.4 million people,
bringing the total displaced population to 4.1 million – the largest
concentration of internal refugees anywhere in Africa. The violence has
exacerbated food insecurity, with more than three million people severely undernourished.
Unfortunately, the Kasai crisis is expected to worsen in 2018. A recent assessment by the Red Cross Society of the DRC
warns that the number of people displaced will continue to rise, and
with a fast-spreading cholera outbreak threatening the region, a
coordinated plan of action is urgently needed.
The second challenge
this year is Somalia’s food insecurity, which, according to the Famine
Early Warning Systems Network, is expected to intensify this year.
Below-average rainfall in 2017 stunted harvests, and most regions have
not fully recovered. As humanitarian aid is channeled to the country,
efforts must be made to target long-term solutions, such as improving
agricultural output, educational access, and economic opportunity.
Historically, most aid to the country has been earmarked for emergency
relief; even the collective cholera response was narrowly focused on
short-term health. But Somalia desperately needs a more holistic,
long-term development strategy.
Finally,
the very scourge that Somalia contained last year will continue to rear
its head elsewhere in the region. Yemen’s cholera outbreak is now the
largest in history, having already surpassed one million confirmed cases,
and, despite years of international assistance, the threat continues to
stalk Africa. In the last four decades, African countries reported over three million suspected cholera cases to the World Health Organization and new cases are cropping up this year in Africa’s east-central and southern regions.
Fortunately, there is
hope that Somalia’s containment success in 2017 can be replicated,
provided that communities and individuals are well aware of the disease
and related risks, and that local actors receive the needed resources.
The Global Task Force on Cholera Control, which seeks to build local and international support for improved health care and sanitation, has published a global roadmap
for ending cholera by 2030. Although that is an ambitious target, it is
achievable if international organizations and local governments work
together.
Natural and manmade
crises will continue to plague Africa, but organizations like mine are
working hard to bring about a brighter future through improved capacity
building. To succeed, however, local and international development
partners must reorient their thinking; humanitarian aid alone will not
solve Africa’s myriad challenges. While money is clearly needed, it must
be spent more strategically to improve structural weaknesses that
perpetuate instability. For example, if more funding were devoted to
community-level health care projects, local organizations would be
better positioned to lead when outbreaks threaten.
Put simply, the
international development community must do more to invest in grassroots
solutions, empowering Africans rather than treating them as
subcontractors to their own suffering. Not only are local organizations
better positioned to navigate complex cultural and linguistic
landscapes; they also have more to lose if they fail.
Last year was
devastating for many Africans, as millions suffered from drought,
hunger, and violence. But in Somalia, a coordinated response to a
serious health threat offered new hope for a more secure future. When
local ingenuity and international support align, the cycle of suffering
can be broken. For many African countries, the ability to look
confidently beyond the next crisis is the first step on the long road to
self-reliance.
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