Africa, Aid, Government, Society, United Nations, Yemen

UN: World facing gravest humanitarian crisis since 1945

AFRICA

Food Crisis

Intro: The UN has received only about 10 per cent of the money it has sought since launching appeals last month for the drought-affected countries

The world is facing its biggest humanitarian crisis since the end of the second world war, with 20m people facing starvation and famine in Yemen, Somalia, South Sudan and Nigeria, the UN has warned.

The UN’s humanitarian chief, Stephen O’Brien, has told the Security Council that $4.4bn was needed in the next four months to address the escalating situation.

“Without collective and co-ordinated global efforts, people will simply starve to death,” he said. “Many more will suffer and die from disease.

“Already at the beginning of the year we are facing the largest humanitarian crisis since the creation of the United Nations.”

The UN last month declared a famine in parts of South Sudan, which has been wracked by civil war for more than three years. But Mr O’Brien said the most serious crisis was in Yemen, where two-thirds of the population, some 18.8m people, need assistance and more than 7m are facing starvation.

“That is 3m people more than in January,” he said, adding that in the last two months almost 50,000 people had fled fighting between forces loyal to the government and Houthi rebels.

Some 6.2m people need help in Somalia, of whom 2.9m are in dire need; 4.9m in South Sudan and some 1.8m in north-eastern Nigeria.

Kenya and Ethiopia are among other countries facing the impacts of severe droughts but their governments have a better capacity to cope.

Famine is declared when daily mortality rates are two or more deaths per 10,000 people and 30 per cent of children suffer from acute malnutrition, among other criteria.

Mr O’Brien stressed that the looming catastrophe was “man-made” and “preventable”.

“It is possible to avert this crisis, to avert these famines, to avert these looming human catastrophes,” he said, stressing that the warring parties in South Sudan were making little effort to alleviate the situation.

The international community has started reacting to the threat of famine much more quickly than in the last such crisis, when 260,000 people died in Somalia in 2012. Many agencies, particularly UN bodies, have started spending pledged aid money before it has been disbursed by using their own reserves.

António Guterres, the UN secretary-general, said this week after visiting Somalia that the situation was deteriorating. He described how he saw children dying from acute watery diarrhoea and cholera.

He said that systems were in place to avert the worst of the looming crisis, if money and aid are delivered.

However, Save the Children UK warned that despite a better response than in 2012 some of the mistakes made then were being repeated. Kevin Watkins, Save the Children’s chief executive, singled out inadequate planning and a slow response from donors.

The UN has received only about 10 per cent of the money it has sought since launching appeals last month for the drought-affected countries.

Mr O’Brien said that if money is not committed soon, not only will many people die but many children who survive will be stunted by severe malnutrition, gains in economic development will be reversed and “livelihoods, futures and hope will be lost”.

 

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Britain, Government, Islamic State, Society, Terrorism, United States

The U.S. will host 68-Nation symposium on fight against IS

UNITED STATES

Rex Tillerson

U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson will host President Trump’s anti-terror alliance summit in Washington on March 22-23.

Intro: The State Department said it would be the first meeting of the full coalition since December 2014, shortly after it was founded.

U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson will host a 68-nation meeting in Washington this month to discuss the next moves by a coalition fighting Islamic State, the State Department has said.

The March 22-23 meeting of coalition foreign ministers is aimed ‘to accelerate international efforts to defeat ISIS in the remaining areas it holds in Iraq and Syria and maximize pressure on its branches, affiliates, and networks.’

The State Department said it would be the first meeting of the full coalition since December 2014, shortly after it was founded.

This is an opportunity for Secretary Tillerson to lay out the challenges that are facing the coalition moving forward.

A spokesperson for the U.S. State Department said: ‘We all recognise that we have seen progress in defeating ISIS on the ground … how do we leverage that success? How do we build on that success?’

Islamic State has declared a caliphate in Iraq and Syria. It has been losing ground in both countries, with three separate forces, backed by the United States, Turkey and Russia, advancing on its Syrian stronghold of Raqqa.

President Donald Trump signed an executive order on January 28 requesting the Pentagon, joint chiefs of staff and other agencies to submit a preliminary plan in 30 days for defeating Islamic State.

Details of that plan are still classified, but the upcoming meeting would look at how ‘to augment existing capabilities and processes on the ground.’

Iraqi forces have advanced deeper into west Mosul, facing stiff resistance from Islamic State militants who have used suicide car bombs and snipers to defend their last major stronghold in Iraq.

The Iraqi operation to retake the eastern bank of the city, launched in mid-October with support from the U.S.-led coalition, took more than three months. The offensive to recapture west Mosul began less than three weeks ago.

Mosul is the largest city which Islamic State has held. The group has lost most of the cities it captured in northern and western Iraq in 2014 and 2015.

There is little doubt Iraqi forces will eventually prevail over the militants, who are outnumbered and overpowered, but even if it loses Mosul, Islamic State is expected to revert to their insurgent tactics of old.

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Government, Politics, Society, United States

Donald Trump should deal with what he was elected to do

UNITED STATES

Intro: President Trump has more pressing issues to contend with than constant squabbling with his political opponents.

IT WAS IN 1987 when Donald Trump wrote in his book The Art of the Deal, ‘you can get any job done through sheer force of will’. This has come to be reflective of his attitude that is both his strength and weakness.

It got him elected President of the United States against all predictions; but it has also made the first few weeks of his tenure in the White House a somewhat surreal experience for those looking in.

The fact that Mr Trump is not a politician in the conventional sense was well known to voters before last November’s election. It will take time for him to become familiar with presidential protocols and in becoming more accommodating, rather than disdainful, of aspects of the office he now holds. Indeed, it was largely this image of the anti-libertarian and anti-establishment figure that appealed to millions of American voters.

But even though he won he continues to act as though he were the loser. He fixated for a while on the fact that Hillary Clinton obtained more votes than he did, despite the college electoral system declaring him the winner.

In recent days, he has accused his predecessor Barack Obama of authorising the tapping of his campaign HQ telephone in Trump Tower, but without providing corroborating evidence to substantiate the claim. The FBI has denied it ever happened, which is tantamount to accusing Mr Trump of lying.

It is not a healthy state of affairs for the president and his intelligence agencies to be constantly at war. Mr Trump has now signed a revamped immigration ban wholly aimed at stopping terrorists entering the US, but is becoming increasingly alarmed at the belligerence being displayed by North Korea. Its latest indiscipline includes the firing of three ballistic missiles towards Japan.

As the leader of the world’s most powerful nation there are far more important things for him to be getting on with. Mr Trump no longer needs to keep fighting opponents he has already defeated.

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