World Disasters Report 2003 – Focus on ethics in aid

Publication language
English
Pages
243pp.
Date published
01 Jan 2003
Type
Research, reports and studies
Keywords
Accountability and Participation, Disasters
Organisations
American Red Cross

 

The humanitarian ethic is about saving the lives of those in greatest need. But,
swamped as we are by the statistics of suffering, we must also respect the human
dignity of every woman, man and child whose life is shattered by conflict, hunger,
disease or disaster. Putting the two parts of this ethic into practice remains the greatest
challenge facing not only humanitarian organizations, but all those with a stake in
humanitarian crises.


The record, however, is very mixed. Humanitarian aid tends to favour high-profile
emergencies at the expense of more invisible suffering far from the media or political
spotlight. While countries targeted in the ‘war on terror’ have attracted unprecedented
levels of humanitarian and reconstruction aid, other – arguably more pressing – crises
languish in the shadows. Africa is besieged by droughts, floods, conflict, infectious
diseases and – most deadly of all – the HIV/AIDS pandemic, which claimed an
estimated 6,500 lives every day last year. Floods and snowstorms have wrecked
hundreds of thousands of lives across the Russian Federation and Mongolia. Tens of
millions of Asians, Africans and Latin Americans have been forced by violence,
natural disasters or economic ruin to flee their homes in search of survival.