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Pirates: Latest Threat To Africa Food Aid

ISSUE 195
Front Page
Index

Headlines

Results Of Parliamentary Elections In The Hargeysa Region Announced

TFG Spy Found Aboard A UN Chartered Plane

Cyber-Dating Outsmarts Somaliland Suitors, Worries UN

Interview With Mark Bradbury, Somaliland Poll Observer

Rockshelters Of Las Geel. Republic Of Somalilandt

Yemen Arming Abdillahi Yusuf’s Faction ‎

Militia Leader, Alleged Terrorist, Calls For Islamic ‎Rule In Somalia, End To Interference

Kenyans Advised To Avoid Somali Coastline

People

Somali Poetry Event: The Great Somali Poet Maxamed ‎Xaashi Dhamac 'Gaarriye' In The UK

International News

Pirates: Latest Threat To Africa Food Aid The US Congress Looks At Revising Its Hunger ‎Program

WFP Welcomes Release of Second Food Aid ‎Ship Hijacked in Somalia - Press Release‎

Somali Man Fights Deportation

Yemen Denies Illegal Arms Supply

ANTI TERRORISM LEGISLATION
British Govt Proposes Banning 15 Groups

Ethiopia: Fresh Cabinet Faces As Meles Starts New Term

UN Special Representative To Visit Moscow And ‎Stockholm For Consultations On Somalia Peace Process

SOMALIA: Interim Gov't Denies Violating Arms Embargo

Sacked Somalia Bank Governor Lobbies Donors

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Dueling Priorities For Beijing In The Horn Of Africa

Sacked Somalia Bank Governor Lobbies Donors

Editorial & Opinions

Somaliland Election: An Account Of A Close Observer

Era Of Bipolar Power Structure Dawns In Somaliland

About Kulmiye...‎

Yusuf Uses Office To Arm Himself: The ‎Threat To Somaliland And Somalia

SOMALILAND: A LULLABY IN THE WIND

The Ten Most Important Things Somaliland Should Do To ‎Strengthen Democracy And Gain International Recognition

Starting Young

Tom Cookes, And SBS Radio Journalist Issa Farah Travel ‎To Jowhar In Somalia


By Abraham McLaughlin | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor ‎

JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA, October 13, 2005 (The Christian Science Monitor) --

A hulking UN-chartered ‎cargo ship, docked at a port in Somalia this week, was halfway finished unloading its 850 tons of corn and rice ‎when a band of gun-toting bandits stormed aboard and forced the crew to take the ship to sea. ‎

It was the second hijacking of a UN food-aid ship in four months in Somalia. Some 78,000 people may go hungry ‎if the situation isn't resolved soon. But more than that, it's an example of how difficult it is becoming to get food to ‎Africa's hungry masses in ways that are safe, efficient, and effective. And it's one more reason why there's growing ‎pressure for major changes to the massive global food-aid system, which is funded by US and other wealthy-nation ‎taxpayers. ‎

In a different sort of example, in Niger, the world's slow response to a food crisis earlier this yearmeant many ‎thousands of people went with little or nothing to eat at first. But now, after delivering many tons of food, the UN is ‎discontinuing most free food - to avoid disrupting Niger's markets as local farmers bring in their harvest, causing ‎long-term damage to the country's ability to feed itself. This comes, ironically, despite continuing hunger. ‎

Such problems support a view by a few experts that the entire food-aid system should even be scrapped - and that ‎Africa would be better off with much less help from abroad. ‎
Either way, it's an urgent issue with some 12 million southern Africans once again facing food shortages in coming ‎months, the UN says. ‎
Getting aid to the hungry is "really difficult" in current circumstances, so the people on the ground need the ‎greatest "flexibility" and support, says Edward Clay, a senior researcher at the Overseas Development Institute in ‎London. That's why he argues for one seemingly simple change now being debated in the US Congress that might ‎alleviate a major food-aid problem: how to get food to crisis areas quickly. ‎

The lag time between US officials deciding to help hungry neighbors and the food actually arriving can be six ‎months. That's because 99 percent of US food aid is bought from US farmers, and shipped, primarily by US-‎flagged vessels, overseas. This is in contrast to Europe's preferred method of sending cash to buy food from ‎markets nearer the crisis. Britain, for instance, spends 91 percent of its food-aid money this way, according to an ‎analysis Dr. Clay did using UN data. ‎

In a recent study, Clay found that so-called "tied" food aid - which refers to the US method of requiring food to be ‎bought in the country donating it - adds at least 30 percent to the cost. "Untying" aid could add $750 million to ‎the purchasing power of about $4 billion spent yearly on food aid by wealthy nations. ‎

Clay argues that "tied" aid also ties the hands of relief officials. In Niger, he says, the recent crisis could have ‎largely been averted if aid agencies had more cash to supplement hungry people's food purchases. "It could have ‎been resolved locally," he says. Critics, however, worry that cash can too easily go missing on this corrupt ‎continent. ‎
The Bush Administration is backing a provision to "un-tie" much of US food aid. But critics say it would wreck ‎along and profitable partnership among US farmers, agribusiness processors, shippers, and aid agencies that has ‎created the largest food-aid program in the world. (In 2004, the US gave 4.2 million tons out of 7.5 million tons of ‎global food aid, according to UN figures.) The plan looks unlikely to pass Congress. ‎ In addition to the problem of piracy, the high cost of oil hurts aid delivery. Some aid agencies say they've been ‎forced to spend money on rising delivery costs that could have been spent on food. ‎

Meanwhile, Somalia's piracy problem is a byproduct of a country which has been without a government since ‎‎1991. Another food-aid boat was seized June 27 with a two-month supply of rice for 28,000 Somali victims of the ‎‎2004 tsunami. It was held for 100 days - and only recently released. The food still arrived in southern Somalia, ‎where "people survive on almost nothing," says Abid Mohammed, a Somali businessman. "If those people don't ‎get food, it doesn't take much to tip them over the edge." The UN may now truck its food overland to avoid pirates ‎‎- but at a greater transport cost. ‎

Yet some argue the food-aid system may not be worth having. "The food-aid equation actually hurts Africa more ‎than it helps," says economist James Shikwati, director of the Inter Region Economic Network in Nairobi, Kenya. ‎‎"If it was helping," he says, "the problem would be solved by now." In fact, he sees it as fundamentally unethical. ‎‎"You can't say you're helping people if you're not helping them" break the cycle of famine. African politicians use ‎hunger as a tool to gain votes, he says. Western relief agencies use it to fund-raise. This creates a "manna ‎mentality" where Africans wait for bread "to drop from heaven." ‎

And once again, the system faces a major test in southern Africa, where 12 million people are reportedly on the ‎verge of hunger. In 2002, an appeal for help averted a famine in the region. This year, say WFP officials, Malawi ‎faces its toughest "hunger season" in a decade - and risks being a "repeat of Niger." ‎
Jason Motlagh in Niamey, Niger, and Peter Martell in Hargeisa, Somaliland, contributed‎

 


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