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Journal Article

Citation

Fennell J. Disasters 1998; 22(2): 96-108.

Affiliation

jfennell@compuserve.com

Copyright

(Copyright © 1998, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

9654810

Abstract

The Great Lakes tragedy from 1994-8 has demonstrated the impact of a new consensus in favour of conditional relief for the protection and assistance of disaster victims. This paper attempts to catalogue the failures of the international humanitarian community, African leaders and donor governments to act effectively in defence of humanitarian principles throughout the crisis. The paper places special emphasis on the events in eastern Zaire during 1996-7 that have, so far, received limited treatment, and, it contends, led to the loss of hundreds of thousands of lives. The paper argues that the new orthodoxy of developmental relief, as adopted by UN and NGO humanitarian agencies in the Great Lakes, has acted more in support of the geopolitical and economic agendas of Northern governments and African leaders than in defence of disaster victims. The paper points out that the evidence of the Great Lakes tragedy suggests that the adoption of these approaches has sanctioned the abandonment of ideas about universal rights of protection for non-combatants at the moment when they are most at risk, with catastrophic results for those most vulnerable to abuse.


Language: en

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