The United Nations (UN) on Tuesday launched a 2003/04 regional consolidated appeal for southern Africa to provide life-saving assistance for 6,5-million people severely weakened by consecutive failed harvests, extreme poverty and HIV/Aids.
The UN system in collaboration with non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and the Southern Africa Development Community (SADC), are appealing for $53-million ($320-million for food and $210-million for other aid) to address the humanitarian needs of 6,5-million vulnerable people in Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Swaziland, Zambia and Zimbabwe.
”Because of the quick response from the international community, the UN and its NGO partners saved millions of lives threatened by starvation in southern Africa over the past year. But the crisis is not over and I urge donors to remember hundreds of thousands of families, many of them in Zimbabwe, who are still in grave danger,” said James Morris, the UN Secretary General’s Special Envoy for Humanitarian Needs in Southern Africa.
In addition to food aid, the 12-month appeal also seeks to fund water and sanitation, agriculture, education and health projects.
The 2002/03 appeal for southern Africa received 73% of the $656-million requested by the UN agencies and NGOs for their operations assisting millions of crisis-stricken people in the region.
The majority of the donations made were for food aid, while non-food aid remained seriously under-funded.
Although humanitarian response and an improved harvest this year have brought some respite for much of the region, many parts of the six countries covered by the appeal remain extremely fragile.
Acute needs, particularly in Zimbabwe and Mozambique, will be a primary focus of UN agencies.
Agencies will also assist those families which have not been able to recover from last year’s emergency, despite improved rains, in countries such as Lesotho, Malawi, Swaziland and Zambia.
Hundreds of thousands of people were forced to sell household items and livestock to survive last year’s crisis and cannot afford to buy the food, which is now available in markets.
Seeds and fertiliser are still urgently needed to produce future harvests, as are medicines to fight life-threatening diseases.
In addition, the appeal will focus on the devastating effects of the HIV/Aids pandemic.
Southern Africa has the highest levels of HIV/Aids prevalence in the world.
Not only is HIV/Aids killing millions of people prematurely, it is also wiping out the most productive members of society — farmers, teachers, health workers — leaving millions of orphans, widows, widowers and elderly.
As a result, decades of development gains have been lost and efforts to reduce poverty and improve living standards have been severely undermined.
The impact of HIV/Aids on children is especially damaging.
The total number of Aids orphans in the six countries is estimated to be over 2,3-million and that number is rising fast.
”Even if rains begin to improve, as they did in parts of the region during the last season, how will fields be planted if there are no farmers to till the soil,” said Morris.
”The world cannot afford to avert its gaze from southern Africa right now. If it does, we will see an accelerated and irreversible unravelling of societies across the region.”
In addition to food aid, projects have been designed to strengthen longer-term development at the household level, as well as to strengthen vital social services.
”As long as HIV/Aids continues to be the single biggest destroyer of lives and livelihoods in this region, southern Africa will remain on the precipice of an unparalleled humanitarian tragedy,” said Morris.
”We absolutely cannot return to a ‘business as usual’ approach in southern Africa. It is simply not an option.” ‒ I-Net Bridge