Aid
Drops in Afghanistan
Margaret Emery,
Hiram Ruiz and Jeff Drumtra
(The authors
are policy analysts for the US Committee for Refugees.)
October 10,
2001
| For
further information, see the US Committee for Refugees website
at:
http://www.refugees.org
The winter
2001 issue of Middle East Report (MER 221) features
in-depth analysis of Afghanistan's politics and prospects
as the US military operations continue. |
In the wake
of the military offensive against Afghanistan that began October
7, the United States is settling in for what appears to be a long-term
campaign. As the Bush administration selects its next military targets,
some five million people inside Afghanistan who depend on international
food aid for survival are considering a more basic, but no less
urgent matter: how to survive the coming winter. They can stay in
their homes, where they may find themselves without food in a matter
of days. They can attempt to travel toward Pakistan or Iran, under
threat of US bombing raids and freezing temperatures in mountain
passes. Or they can migrate to locations within Afghanistan, where
they have heard that food is -- or might become -- available.
How best to
deliver food to a starving, embattled and isolated population is
a daily challenge faced by aid workers. The $320 million aid package
and food air drop campaign unveiled with great fanfare by the Bush
administration is, on the surface, a generous attempt to facilitate
the work of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), the World
Food Program (WFP) and other humanitarian agencies. Yet the US had
more than altruism in mind when it announced a large aid campaign
for the country with which it is at war. Responding to pressure
on several fronts -- from the Islamic world, already suspicious
of or hostile to the idea of US military action in Afghanistan,
from Afghanistan's neighbors, who are bracing themselves for a massive
new refugee influx, and from domestic critics who have urged the
US to address humanitarian considerations -- the US is using refugee
aid to score political points. While food drops in Afghanistan are
hardly the first example of politicized humanitarian aid, the current
US campaign has linked military and aid goals to the point that
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld is fielding questions about food
drops at Pentagon briefings.
Some humanitarian
agencies have dismissed the Administration's food drops as mere
"propaganda," reflecting their fear that the primary US
interest in humanitarian assistance lies in its value as a public
relations tool. If these fears turn out to be well-grounded, it
would be catastrophic for the displaced and hungry within and outside
Afghanistan. Unlike the sudden emergency of the "ethnic cleansing"
of Kosovo by Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic in 1999, which
created a huge refugee population, the conditions which led to the
current humanitarian situation for Afghanistan's refugee populations
run back 20 years. The Afghan refugees' deeply entrenched crisis
has taken years to create, and will take more years to effectively
resolve. US and international aid efforts must go beyond the cosmetic
-- ineffective, risky and expensive air drops -- and concentrate,
at the first opportunity, on effective long-term solutions to the
misery faced by Afghanistan's large population of internally displaced
people and refugees.
"RACE
AGAINST THE CLOCK"
Twenty-three
years of unrelenting conflict, widespread human rights abuses and,
more recently, acute drought have created devastating humanitarian
conditions in Afghanistan. Since 1978, millions of Afghans have
sought refuge in neighboring countries (2 million currently live
in Pakistan and 1.5 million in Iran), while at least 900,000 were
displaced from their homes within Afghanistan before September 11.
Both refugees and internally displaced Afghans face an everyday
struggle to survive.
Inside Afghanistan,
millions of Afghans rely on international food aid -- largely supplied,
in 2001, by the US -- for survival. The economy, ruined by years
of war, suffered a further blow when the worst drought in 30 years
caused crop failures that led hundreds of thousands of Afghans to
leave their homes in search of food beginning in June 2000.
Under these
conditions, and with the onset of winter, the potential for a humanitarian
disaster is increasing exponentially by the week. Current aid efforts
have been described by the UNHCR as a "race against the clock."
Without a significant aid effort to respond to the large-scale human
movement that has already taken place within Afghanistan, thousands
of Afghans could face death from starvation in the coming months.
BLEAK AND
BLEAKER
For refugees
in Pakistan, assistance is currently hampered by deteriorating security
conditions in and around Peshawar and Quetta, where most groups
assisting Afghan refugees are based. Violent demonstrations and
a string of attacks on international and local relief agency offices
have forced aid workers to curtail their activities, including surveying
prospective areas for new refugee camps and border monitoring. Both
Iranian and Pakistani officials insist that they cannot accommodate
any more refugees and have sealed their borders. While no large
refugee movements resulting from US military strikes have been reported,
civilians are continuing to trickle clandestinely across the Pakistani
border at the rate of about 1,000 per day. UNHCR has made preparations
for 300,000 new refugees in Pakistan and 80,000 in Iran. UN officials
warn that the number could rise as high as 1.5 million, although
it is unclear whether Pakistan and Iran will allow such large numbers
of refugees to enter.
For those inside
Afghanistan, the prospects for obtaining basic food aid, shelter
and medical care are even bleaker. Although the UN and other aid
agencies have supplied food and other assistance to the Afghan population
for years, all international aid workers have withdrawn since the
September 11 terrorist attacks, leaving only a skeleton staff of
local UN employees in place. Operating conditions have been hampered
by a communications blackout inside Afghanistan, with the Taliban
banning aid workers from using satellite phones. Ground delivery
of new supplies from outside Afghanistan has come to a halt because
of the US air strikes; the danger posed to aid workers was highlighted
on October 9, when a stray missile or bomb struck the UN de-mining
office in Kabul, killing four local employees. Although conditions
on the ground are changing rapidly and delivery of aid by truck
may be possible within days or weeks, at the moment, the only option
for food delivery is the controversial food air drops.
FOOD FROM
THE SKY
Virtually all
aid agencies view air drops as a last-ditch tactic for delivering
humanitarian relief to isolated areas. Air drops are more expensive
and usually less targeted to the neediest people than are other
methods of food distribution. A certain percentage of food will
become spoiled or unusable because of packaging that breaks on impact
or gets lost, while the lack of distribution controls on the ground
means that a certain percentage of food will not reach the intended
recipients. Air drops also create problems of their own: civilians
on the ground near drop zones can be injured by food falling from
the sky, or aid may fall into mined areas, endangering people attempting
to retrieve the aid. If air drop locations are few, the drops can
trigger large-scale migration to the drop location, resulting in
population overcrowding, water shortages and health problems that
might not have existed otherwise. Social tensions between different
local communities can also arise in drop areas. Finally, it will
be impossible to prevent aid from falling into the hands of Taliban
officials.
In the southern
Sudan, where the international community has conducted relief operations
for more than ten years, air drops are at least partly successful
because they occur at specific locations on a pre-arranged schedule,
allowing well-trained international and local aid workers on the
ground to designate "drop zones," clearly mark the drop
zones for pilots and control crowds who inevitably converge on the
drop area. Pilots are able to drop the food from an altitude as
low as 200 feet, maximizing accuracy and minimizing food spoilage.
Relief agencies on the ground have, through years of experience,
developed a disciplined process to collect the food after it is
dropped by planes, inventory the food stock and distribute the food
systematically to local heads of families, using beneficiary lists
developed in advance.
In 1996, international
policymakers toyed with the idea of air dropping food in Congo-Kinshasa
during 1996 to assist tens of thousands of Rwandan refugees who
were in the country and fleeing from Congo's own violence, but the
air drops never took place because of rugged forested terrain, uncertainty
about the numbers and exact locations of refugees on the move, and
concerns that the food would be confiscated by combatants living
among the refugees.
Some of the
food dropped in Afghanistan probably will reach extremely hungry
people who cannot be reached in any other way at this time. While
air drops have limited usefulness, they should be utilized if they
offer the only method of food delivery. The US government has already
acknowledged that air drops are not the optimal way to deliver aid,
and has indicated that ground delivery will resume when conditions
become safe.
TAKING THE
LONG VIEW
The effectiveness
of food drops aside, restoring stability and self-sufficiency to
Afghanistan will require a long-term commitment involving more than
emergency aid. While the US commitment of $320 million in aid is
an important first step, any lasting effects will require an intensive
and well-planned effort that reflects the reality of a population
that has endured decades of civil war, and, in the case of 3.5 million
Afghans, has lived for years in exile in neighboring countries.
With the situation on the ground in Afghanistan shifting on a daily
basis, it is difficult to assess the long-term prospects for peace
and stability. The Northern Alliance, to which the US has reportedly
lent covert assistance in its efforts to overthrow the Taliban,
has a spotty human rights record that does not bode well for large-scale
return of refugees at the conclusion of US military activity in
the region. Whenever stability returns to Afghanistan, the US should
support a government that will create a safe environment for the
return of refugees, continue to protect, support and/or resettle
refugee populations that cannot return home, and administer aid
programs for the Afghan people that restore economic self-sufficiency.
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