Published on Alternet (http://www.alternet.org)
There
Are 3 Major Famines on Our Planet Right Now—Can You Even Name Them? The Media
Is Virtually Blacking Out Human Tragedy
By Jack Healey [1] / Huffington Post [2]
May 1, 2017
To be
an American in the world today is to be a citizen of a country rapidly losing
its place as a global leader in foreign aid, foreign assistance and even what
we once might have considered the moral high ground. There are crises, it
seems, in every corner of the globe, including refugee camps in the center of
Paris and immigrant detention centers on our own borders. Our leaders are
telling us these crises are impossible to solve diplomatically, complex in
nature and beyond the scope of what we can or should handle.
And
yet on April 6, Representative Barbara Lee along with ten other
representatives, sent a letter to the Committee on Appropriations with a simple
request—money for famine relief. Money for food, for people who had none.
Specifically, a billion dollars.
The
countries they were hoping to assist were places that are geopolitically
complex—namely, Yemen, along with South Sudan, Somalia and Nigeria. Famine in
these places has its roots in everything from colonialism to climate change to
U.S. foreign policy in the region. Specifically in Yemen, the U.S. has
supported Saudi Arabia in its brutal campaign to stop ISIS as well as the
Houthis, a Shi’ite minority fighting the Saudi-backed Sunni government.
Hospitals, schools, refugee centers—these have all been bombing targets of a
campaign quietly supported by both the Obama and Trump administrations. The
instability has led to famine across a country that was never food-stable to
begin with, leaving families unable to find the food to feed their children.
Over 17 million are facing imminent famine without immediate international
assistance.
There
has been no Congressional approval for our support of the Saudi military
campaign in Yemen, no declaration of war and no speech to the American people
about the how and the why. While Obama held the Saudis at arms’ length because
of the brutal nature of the conflict, hoping to execute at least some type of
control, the Trump administration has invited them to the White House, welcomed
them with open arms. The administration that has preached America first
isolationism is entangling us more deeply in a conflict in a country not even
on the radar screens of most voters. And yet, to obtain the funding to ease the
repercussions of this campaign requires a lengthy approval process in Congress,
clear justification, bipartisan support.
In
Somalia, over six million people are currently facing famine and drought.
Driven from their homes by political instability, they are swelling refugee
camps that are rapidly running out of food and water. The governments’ ongoing
battle with the al-Qaeda associated terrorist organization al-Shabab has spread
to the farms and villages of ordinary Somalis, splitting families apart and
forcing people to leave behind their livestock and livelihood as they flee the
conflict. The roots of al-Shabab’s rise are complex lie in the political
instability created decades ago, when the U.S. and Soviet Union used Somalia to
fight its proxy wars. In the decades since, the U.S. has invaded Somalia again
and again, in covert military operations requiring no Congressional approval or
declaration of war. The fractured country was fertile ground for the training
camps of al-Shabab’s parent organization. And yet, to find the funding to ease
this imminent famine, another byproduct of the constant onslaught of foreign
intervention and instability, is somehow almost insurmountable.
In
South Sudan, whose split from the northern part of the country was supported by
many across the West, famine has returned with a vengeance to the men, women
and children caught between warring tribes vying for the presidency. Our
support for this initial break was largely political, driven by pressure from
powerful Christian lobby groups on Congress and the Obama administration, yet
it was interference nonetheless. The U.S. chose a side, and hailed the split
from the north as some sort of triumph of western inspired democracy; when that
fledgling democracy descended almost immediately into bloodshed, we turned our
backs. The famine that followed that instability rages on, without foreign aid,
support, or attention.
Jack
Healey is the Founder/ Director of Human Rights Action Center.
[4]
Links:
[1] http://www.alternet.org/authors/jack-healey
[2] http://www.huffingtonpost.com/
[3] mailto:corrections@alternet.org?Subject=Typo on There Are 3 Major Famines on Our Planet Right Now—Can You Even Name Them? The Media Is Virtually Blacking Out Human Tragedy
[4] http://www.alternet.org/
[5] http://www.alternet.org/%2Bnew_src%2B
[2] http://www.huffingtonpost.com/
[3] mailto:corrections@alternet.org?Subject=Typo on There Are 3 Major Famines on Our Planet Right Now—Can You Even Name Them? The Media Is Virtually Blacking Out Human Tragedy
[4] http://www.alternet.org/
[5] http://www.alternet.org/%2Bnew_src%2B
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has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles.
The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject
class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially their
lives." Eugene Victor Debs
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