Friday, August 30, 2024

The bad news continent

That would be Africa, which seems to rarely be the source of positive news lately.

Today, in the New York Times, for example:

The resurgence of mpox has reminded the world of how dangerous this disease is for personal and community health. But less focus has been placed on the profound crises that exacerbate outbreaks like these, particularly in Africa. They are made exponentially worse because of the broader sociopolitical and economic challenges that many African countries face, exposing vulnerabilities that extend far beyond the realm of public health. Mpox is simply the latest crisis, and this cycle will not abate without meaningful action to alleviate the larger plights affecting the continent.

The Democratic Republic of Congo stands as a stark example of how a health crisis can intertwine with ongoing emergencies. The country experienced outbreaks like cholera, Ebola and Covid-19. Now it is at the center of the mpox outbreak in Africa. This year Congo has reported over 17,000 cases and over 500 deaths — the most cases and deaths in the continent — particularly in provinces like Équateur and South Kivu. These regions, already burdened by conflict, displacement and health infrastructural collapse, are grappling with the additional strain of a widespread and deadly mpox outbreak.

The emergence of a new mpox strain has added a layer of complexity to a challenging situation. Although the disease has spread predominantly because of sexual contact between adults, any physical contact can cause transmission of the virus. This means the overcrowded camps housing hundreds of thousands of people displaced by armed conflict are potential breeding grounds for a large-scale outbreak of the disease. These displaced families are grappling with the trauma of conflict, and now they must navigate the additional burden of disease.

And they're about to start eating a lot of elephants down south:

The Southern African nation of Namibia is planning to butcher hundreds of its most majestic animals to feed some of the 1.4 million people — nearly half the country — who are in a hunger crisis amid the worst drought in a century.

The plan, under which the country will kill 723 wild animals, including 83 elephants, to feed people, is “necessary” and “in line with our constitutional mandate where our natural resources are used for the benefit of Namibian citizens,” the country’s ministry of environment, forestry and tourism said in a news release.

 Meanwhile, over in Ethiopia, a story from last month:

A humanitarian crisis is unfolding in the north of Ethiopia, driven by drought, crop failure and continued insecurity in the aftermath of a brutal war.

With local officials warning that more than two million people are now at risk of starvation, the BBC has gained exclusive access to some of the worst affected areas in Tigray province, and analysed satellite imagery to reveal the full scale of the emergency the region now faces.

The month of July is a critical period for food security, when farmers need to plant crops to take advantage of the seasonal rains.

As for local genocides, this was happening a couple of years ago, to little notice in the rest of the world (if I may extrapolate from my low knowledge!):

In a report released last week, issued by the United States-Based New Lines Institute, significant evidence that Ethiopian forces, alongside Amhara Special Forces (ASF), Eritrean Defence Forces (EDF), and Ethiopia’s National Defence Force (ENDF), committed genocidal acts against Tigrayans during the Tigray War (2020-2022) has been documented....

The conflict in Tigray erupted in November of 2020 as a bid by regional authorities for greater autonomy. Tensions erupted when the Tigrayan leadership, represented by the Tigray People’s Liberation Front who had dominated the political and security apparatus for over two decades, defied regional authority and held elections in September of 2020. The outcome was full-out war when forces attacked a federal military command base.

This led to the Ethiopian military moving into the northern region of the country. According to the report, measured by the number of deaths, the Tigray War is the deadliest armed conflict of the 21st century and one of bloodiest since the end of the Cold War, which claimed the lives of over 400,000 soldiers and 300,000 civilians. All parties to the conflict have been alleged to have committed systematic abuses against civilian populations, including widespread sexual violence, mass killings, and torture, among other war crimes. The humanitarian situation remains bleak and has been exacerbated by climate change. The worst drought in 40 years has decimated food production, resulting in 4.5 million people requiring food aid. Meanwhile, one million still remain displaced.

Move up a bit, and we get to Sudan and its seeming state of never-ending crisis.  The Economist writes:

IT IS HARD to see past the human tragedy of the war in Sudan. Perhaps 150,000 people have died since fighting began last year and more than 10m have fled their homes. Millions could perish in the world’s worst famine for at least 40 years. These are reasons enough to care about the conflict. But the collapse of Sudan, at the intersection of Africa and the Middle East, with seven fragile neighbours and some 800km of coast on the turbulent Red Sea, has alarming geopolitical consequences, too.

Sudan is a chaos machine. The war sucks in malign forces from the surrounding region, then spews out instability—which unless the conflict is halted will only get worse. As the country disintegrates, it could upend regimes in the Sahel and the Horn of Africa. It could become a haven for terrorists. It could send an exodus of refugees to Europe. And it could exacerbate the crisis in the Red Sea, where attacks by the Iranian-backed Houthis have already contorted global shipping. “This is a war that is impacting severely on three continents,” says Endre Stiansen, Norway’s ambassador to Sudan.

All a tad depressing...

 

3 comments:

John said...

Long ago I read "Africa Doesn't Matter", a book lamenting the lack of attention to Africa. It completely missed the point. The West did some stupid things and some corporations were malevolent in their deals with African nations. The big problem is Africans still haven't learnt how to govern their countries towards a better future. They, not us, are their biggest problem. It is another example of where the compassion demonstrated by the left prevents them from recognizing that solution is not more aid or Western self-flagellation over the failures in Africa. It might even be the case that democracy can't work with uneducated populations, it barely works with educated ones.

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Africa-Doesnt-Matter-Poorest-Continent/dp/1611453062

Steve said...

Taking the bigger picture, though, John: as I have said here before, one of the things growing older has made me realise is the past is closer to now than what it seems you're young. A 100 year span of history seems a lot when you're 10; a lot less when you're closer to 100 than 10!

Hence, with Africa, it is only just over 100 years since the "scramble for Africa" by European powers ended - seems they count it as being from about 1870 to 1914. This would have been much of the continent's introduction to modernity, and an abrupt one at that, and I don't really see much reason to doubt the "anti colonial" idea that a lot of modern African ethnic turmoil has been caused (or worsened) by them being mixed together somewhat arbitrarily into nation states designed by Europe.

As such, and looking at how long it took Europe to stop fighting within itself, I sometimes think that we probably shouldn't be surprised that the first 100 to 150 old years of the creation of modern Africa would be very difficult for this reason.

Give it another 300 years and should all be sorted!

(I'm being a bit facetious, but I think this realisation that they haven't really had much time compared to the histories of other regions to "get their act together" is still true. It's frustrating, and doesn't tell us much about how to help them overcome conflict, but still a valid point.)

John said...

Fair points Steve. Africa has been occupied a lot longer than Europe and at some stalled in development. The "nations" created by European powers certainly didn't help and tribalism still reigns very strongly in Africa. Europe transcended that. There is an interesting analysis by an anthropologist which puts forward some ideas to explain why Europe flourished. Highly acclaimed. It is not enough to argue, as some do, that Europe "got lucky". Cultural dynamics paved the way to transcend tribalism and enabled that the author called impersonal prosociality.
https://www.penguin.com.au/books/the-weirdest-people-in-the-world-9780141976211