Photo: Nancy Palus/IRIN. Aid group Cri de Coeur accepted military escorts to deliver aid to northern Malians
Source: IRIN
DAKAR, 1 May 2012 (IRIN) - Aid agencies in northern Mali are debating
how or whether they should negotiate with newly installed rebel groups
such as the National Movement for the Liberation of Azawad (MNLA) and
Ansar Dine, which is affiliated to Al Qaeda, to reach people in need.
There are layers of complexity. Agencies have divergent approaches to
securing humanitarian access - some refuse to use armed escorts under
any circumstances, others see them as necessary in extreme situations;
some US agencies cannot negotiate with terrorist-affiliated groups,
others are already doing so. IRIN spoke to humanitarian agencies
operating in the north to find out how they are delivering aid.
Prior to the March 2012 rebel fight for the north, northern Mali had for
years been a volatile operating environment, mainly because of
kidnapping and banditry. Most agencies leave all non-African staff in
the capital, Bamako. Some, such as Catholic Relief Services (CRS), which
operates in Gao, work only through local partners. Others, such as the
World Food Programme (WFP), have for years used private transport
companies to deliver aid.
When rebel groups succeeded in taking power in the north in early April
2012, aid agency operations were made more complicated, initially as
each was forced to scramble to rebuild their stocks and equipment after
widescale looting of their northern offices. CRS estimates that “several
million” dollars, which would have gone into launching a large-scale
food security operation from April to June in the region has been lost,
and only last week two of their warehouses full of food were pillaged.
Agencies have to establish how they will approach rebel groups now in
control, so as not to lose more time. There are some 75,000 people
internally displaced in northern Mali; while thousands more were already
facing food insecurity due to poor harvests, lack of pasture and high
food prices. Alassane Maiga, a teacher at the Yanna Maiga intermediate
school in Gao, told IRIN: “People are getting hungry - there are
volunteers to provide first aid to the injured, but that’s all.”
Operating modes
Approaches vary when it comes to negotiating with rebels. CRS, which is
largely US-funded, will not do so and relies on others in the
humanitarian community to deliver aid. The International Committee of
the Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (ICRC) - in some ways the
‘guardian’ of the humanitarian principles of neutrality, independence
and impartiality - will, but is taking a thorough, gradual approach said
its spokesperson, Stephen Ambrose. This has not stopped them from
working - they have been fuelling Gao’s generator to ensure the city’s
water supply, and have kept Gao and Timbuktu hospitals supplied with
medicines - but nowhere near as much as they would like.
Several aid agency representatives told IRIN that the MNLA are
relatively open when it comes to discussing access, but Ansar Dine
spokespeople change regularly, making it difficult to rely on agreements
already made. They have also officially called for only Malian agencies
to work in the north.
A few agencies, including the Malian Red Cross and French medical NGO
Medecins du Monde (MDM), have already approached all the groups to
discuss access. “We give the same information to all but we remain fully
independent in the way that we operate,” said Olivier Vandecasteele,
head of MDM, which focuses on health and nutrition work.
“You need to spend a lot of time on the phone, and verify through all of
your different contacts how a convoy will pass - so far, we have never
had a convoy that was stopped,” he said. MDM staff say so far they have
had no major access problems in Kidal or Gao.
Vandecasteele said this is partly because MDM has been in the region a
long time, many locals have participated in its activities, and it has
widespread acceptance. MDM owns none of its own cars and rents vehicles
locally, so it lost none during the looting.
Being absolutely rigid in its approach to independence and impartiality
will help the agency operate in the long term if conflict flares up
again, which it well could, said Vandecasteele. ECOWAS has announced it
will take all measures “including use of force” to ensure the
territorial integrity of Mali. Vandecasteele believes that aid groups
might be surprised if they tried to negotiate humanitarian access. “They
might just find they get it,” he told IRIN.
The Mali Humanitarian Country Team, made up of UN and some NGO agency
heads, is working out an access strategy based on the importance of
upholding impartiality, said David Gressly, regional humanitarian
coordinator for the Sahel. While some UN agencies are already
operational, security concerns mean that UN Refugee Agency UNHCR has
very limited access to assess the needs of the displaced, said its
spokesperson Fatoumata Lejeune-Kaba.
Armed escorts
One area of contention is the use of armed escorts. Humanitarian
agencies generally shun the use of armed escorts or armed protection for
their warehouses and other property, so as to avoid affiliation with
one side or the other in a conflict. While some agencies - like MDM -
will never use them, others - like WFP - will do so in extreme
circumstances, said its acting representative, Martine Ohlsen.
“It is partly a question of scale - as the volume goes up, so do the
risks,” said Gressly. Vandecasteele told IRIN he recognizes the
temptation for some agencies to use armed guards, particularly with
highly valuable stock at stake, but that "it sets a dangerous
precedent." As one agency head put it, an armed escort can become an
active belligerent in a conflict overnight.
Some aid groups have already accepted armed escorts. Hearing of people’s
needs in the north, local group Cri du Coeur (Cry of the Heart)
collected money and aid donations from Bamako residents and sent a
convoy north, accepting MNLA escorts between Douentza in the Mopti
region and Gao. “We established contacts with MNLA and Ansar Dine, and
they demanded they secure the convoy themselves, and that they supervise
the distribution of food,” Tidiane Guindo, the public relations officer
of non-profit Cri du Coeur told IRIN. When they arrived, a distribution
committee made up of prominent local citizens were in place to
distribute he goods, he said.
In Timbuktu, local resident Moulaye Sayah told IRIN, the food and
medicines sent there are “distributed under the very close supervision
of Ansar Dine." Some say it is better to have aid delivered that way
than not at all.
Others however, worry that it has dangerous repercussions, including
contributing to a war economy. “They [the guards] don’t do it for free;
and then there is their fuel to cover,” said the agency head. “Aid can
be delivered through armed convoys, but don’t call it humanitarian.”