U.N. Humanitarian Chief: World Leaders Are Failing Us PDF

Summary

This New York Times guest essay, by Martin Griffiths, discusses the ongoing global humanitarian crisis. The author highlights the failures of world leaders in addressing conflicts such as in Ethiopia, Ukraine, Sudan, and the recent attacks in Gaza. The piece emphasizes the gap between global needs and funding for humanitarian aid.

Full Transcript

## U.N. Humanitarian Chief: World Leaders Are Failing Us **By Martin Griffiths** Mr. Griffiths has served as the under secretary general for humanitarian affairs at the United Nations since May 2021. I have spent much of my career in or on the edges of war zones, but nothing quite prepared me for...

## U.N. Humanitarian Chief: World Leaders Are Failing Us **By Martin Griffiths** Mr. Griffiths has served as the under secretary general for humanitarian affairs at the United Nations since May 2021. I have spent much of my career in or on the edges of war zones, but nothing quite prepared me for the breadth and depth of human suffering I have witnessed in my three years as the United Nations' humanitarian chief. The early months of my tenure were consumed with the conflict in Ethiopia's Tigray region and the effort to get more than a trickle of food and other aid to some five million people who had been cut off from the outside world by brutal fighting. Then in February 2022 came Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine: the tanks rolling toward Kyiv, reports of summary executions and sexual violence in towns and villages, the brutal fighting in the east and south of the country that has forced millions of people from their homes and the relentless continuing attacks on apartment buildings, schools, hospitals and energy infrastructure. Tremors were felt around the world, as food prices rose and geopolitical tensions deepened. Just over a year later, the atrocious conflict in Sudan broke out. As two generals have battled for power, thousands of people have been killed and millions displaced, and ethnic-based violence has once again emerged as famine looms. And then came Hamas's horrendous Oct. 7 attacks on Israel and the ensuing bombardment of Gaza, which has turned the blockade-impoverished enclave into hell on earth. The Ministry of Health in Gaza says more than 37,000 people in Gaza have been killed, and almost all Gazans have been forced from their homes, many of them multiple times. Getting humanitarian aid to a population on the verge of famine has been made almost impossible, and humanitarian and United Nations workers have been killed in unconscionable numbers. Millions of others across the world are suffering no less in long-running and unresolved conflicts that no longer make the headlines — in Syria, Yemen, Myanmar, the Democratic Republic of Congo and the Sahel, to name a few. This is precisely the situation that the modern global order, created in the aftermath of World War II and embodied with heartfelt ambition in the United Nations Charter, was meant to prevent. The suffering of millions of people is clear evidence that we are failing. I do not believe this failure, at its heart, lies with the United Nations. After all, the body is only as good as the commitment, effort and resources that its members put in. For me, this is a failure of world leaders: They are failing humanity by breaking the compact between ordinary people and those in whom power is vested. This is most evident in the leaders who, with such callous disregard for the consequences on their own people and others, remorselessly reach for the gun instead of pursue diplomatic solutions. It is particularly egregious when it is permanent members of the Security Council, the United Nations body charged with maintaining international peace and security, that betray their solemn duties in this way. Russia's invasion of Ukraine, an act in violation of the United Nations Charter, is a clear example. The failure of leadership is also evident in some nations' almost unconditional wartime support provided to their allies, despite abundant evidence that it's enabling widespread suffering and potential breaches of international humanitarian law. You can particularly see this in Gaza, where civilian lives and infrastructure are experiencing excessive harm. You can also see it in the obstruction and politicization of humanitarian assistance while hunger and disease spread and humanitarian workers, health care workers and journalists have endured unacceptable losses. Just look at the weapons that have continued to flow to Israel from the United States and many other countries, despite the obviously appalling impact of the war on civilians. It is evident in leaders' failure to hold to account - and even in efforts to undermine accountability – those who breach the U.N. Charter and international law, emboldening those for whom our rules and norms are mere obstacles to their greed for power and resources. And in my world, these failures are particularly evident in the fact that every year, international funding for humanitarian relief reaches nowhere near the amount required while individual nations' military spending increases. In 2023 the world's collective military expenditure rose to $2.4 trillion, and the United Nations and other aid organizations scraped together just $24 billion for humanitarian assistance, a mere 43 percent of the amount required to meet the most urgent needs of hundreds of millions of people. Nevertheless, I still have hope. Despite the many inadequacies of world leadership, I have also seen ample evidence in the past three years and throughout my career that humanity, compassion and people's determination and desire to help one another still burn strong. I have seen this across many world crises, in the host communities that share the little they have with people fleeing conflict and hardship, often for months and years on end; in the spontaneous mobilization of local and national groups that support their communities in times of crisis, such as Sudan's youth-led emergency response rooms, which provide medical, engineering and other emergency support; and in the courageous efforts of humanitarian workers across the globe. Throughout my seven tours of duty with the United Nations, I have seen the unique capability and can-do spirit of this body and its personnel to take on and manage unbelievably complex and demanding situations and to secure solutions to seemingly intractable problems, when empowered to do so. It was this spirit that in 2022 drove my efforts to secure the Black Sea Grain Initiative, an agreement brokered by the United Nations and Turkey that allowed for vast amounts of grain to finally be exported from Ukraine after months of being blocked. This demonstrated that even bitter enemies locked in conflict could agree to mitigate the war's impact on the food security of millions of people around the world. It drove me in tough negotiations with President Bashar al-Assad to allow aid into northwestern Syria after the devastating February 2023 earthquakes and to push for the warring generals in Sudan to agree to the Declaration of Commitment to Protect the Civilians of Sudan, eventually paving the way for some aid to start flowing into the country. All this shows the power of what we now call humanitarian mediation. If we are to have any hope for a better, more peaceful, more equitable future, we need world leaders who unite us rather than continue to seek ways to divide us. We need leaders who are able and willing to harness our collective humanity; reinvigorate our trust in our common laws, norms and institutions; and have the vision and drive to deliver on the immense hope and ambition of the U.N. Charter. As I prepare to step down after three years as the head of the U.N's humanitarian efforts, this is my appeal to leaders on behalf of the humanitarian community and all the people we serve: Set aside narrow interests, division and conflict. Put humanity, cooperation and people's hopes for a better, more equal world back at the center of international relations. Martin Griffiths has served as the under secretary general for humanitarian affairs at the United Nations since May 2021, a role he will be stepping down from at the end of this month. He has spent more than four decades working for the United Nations and aid agencies and as an international conflict and humanitarian mediator.

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