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Critical Report on Nargis Relief Criticized by NGOs


By WAI MOE Friday, April 10, 2009

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Twenty-one international nongovernmental organizations involved in relief and recovery work in Cyclone Nargis in Burma slammed a joint report by the Center for Public Health and Human Rights at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and the Thailand-based Emergency Assistance Team (EAT) as “inaccurate” and a “disservice” on Thursday.

In a joint letter, the NGO group said that the report, titled “After the Storm: Voices from the Delta,” published on February 27, was “both inaccurate and does a disservice to the courageous and resilient survivors of Cyclone Nargis.”

The report focused on human rights violations in the wake of Cyclone Nargis. The authors said that assessments done with the collaboration of the military government have reported little on the human rights situation for survivors and relief workers. .

The response letter said, “We found a number of shortcomings in the report, including its premise, methodology and most of its findings.” 

Defending the relief effort, the letter said: “Dozens of international and local relief agencies along with foreign embassies are continually examining humanitarian and delivery from inside Burma. They are able to do so independently and first-hand.

“The international humanitarian assistance delivered to date has been life-saving and life sustaining for millions of cyclone survivors. It has reached them without significant interference.”

The authors of the Johns Hopkins-EAT report did not get information from the more than 50 international and independent organizations which have operated “on-the-ground” humanitarian work over the past nine months in the country, according to the response letter.

The letter claimed that misleading reports could undermine further aid to cyclone survivors.

Johns Hopkins and EAT said that their report is “the only community-based, independent assessment” of the cyclone relief effort.

“The voice, experiences and eyewitness accounts of the response to Cyclone Nargis have been missing from the international debate around the relief effort,” said the report, describing part of its methodology.

Researchers said in the report that independent assessment of the Nargis relief response proved to be challenging and the assessments were done without the collaboration of the military government.

Based on interviews with Nargis victims from the Irrawaddy delta, the report included accounts of the arrests of local relief workers and forced labor, including some cases of child labor, in the disaster area. Cyclone survivors were forced to work on military-run construction projects such as the repair of military bases, schools, roads and other infrastructure projects, the report said.    

The NGO response letter said that international law is clear that public work enacted during an immediate emergency period is not forced labor.

The 21 NGOs included 11 US-based NGOs—Adventist Development and Relief Agency (ADRA), CARE, Hope International, International Development Enterprises (IDE), International Rescue Committee, Mercy Corps,  Pact, Population Services International (PSI), Relief International, Save the Children and World Vision.

Others NGOs were South African NGO Action Aid, the Burnet Institute, which is a medical research and public health group in Australia, an Italian NGO called CESVI, the Danish Church Aid, the Geneva-based Lutheran World Federation, Malteser International, based in Germany, a London-based charity group, Merlin, the Norwegian Peoples Aid, Norwegian Refugee Council and Welthungerhilfe (German Agro-Action).



COMMENTS (6)
 
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Myint Thein Wrote:
13/04/2009
Htet Aung,

How many times have you visited villages in the delta? How many villagers have you spoken to? These INGOs and Burmese NGOs talk to ordinary people in the delta everyday, to understand what they need, and to monitor the impact of their aid. Of course the situation is not perfect, but it's no different than the normal aid situation and far better than the worst (where aid workers are being killed or taken hostage - there is nothing like that in Burma). Serious problems should be reported, but it has to be balanced - the people in the delta deserve much more than what they are receiving. And they are not receiving more funding because of negative reporting like the Johns Hopkins report. Lives are at stake; it's not all about politics.

Htet Aung Wrote:
11/04/2009
Part 2

If the INGOs inside Burma oppose the Johns Hopkins-EAT report because of their funding concerns and totally ignore the human rights of the Nargis victims, it is dangerous and even encouraging the government to violate human rights.

They must look at the reality of why international funding is difficult to collect and what are the reasons behind that.

In fact, independent and rights-based watchdog organizations outside Burma and INGOs working inside Burma should have coordination and collaboration with each other and fill the gaps existing on the ground. They shouldn't compete with each other.

They shouldn't forget that all of their work should be accountable to Burmese people. Don't forget the former UNDP country coordinator's "confidential report" issued in 2007 just before his tenure.

Please don't give false information to our Burmese people. It is the most important thing and people won't forget the misconduct of those who did this to them.

Myint Thein Wrote:
11/04/2009
The 21 INGOs are absolutely right to criticize the Johns Hopkins report. It's shameful for Johns Hopkins to claim that they are the only "community-based assessment," essentially writing off the incredibly difficult and courageous work of thousands of Burmese and foreigners alike over the past six months, saving the lives of thousands of others. For these people to give their heart and soul to helping the victims in the delta, only to be told that only Johns Hopkins is "independent," is really unconscionable. Reporting on the kinds of human rights abuses that people inside can't report on is fine and necessary. To attack the aid efforts inside is stepping beyond the pale. Johns Hopkins should be deeply ashamed and should apologize. If any funding to aid efforts in the delta is affected as a result of their study, they should take direct responsibility.

Htet Aung Wrote:
11/04/2009
Part 1

The international NGOs inside Burma have two limitations in writing their reports: First, the reports must focus on telling the need for funding to operate their humanitarian projects, and secondly, they have to maintain a good relation with the SPDC by avoiding politically sensitive issues, resulting in avoiding human rights issues in their reports because of its political sensitivity. They claimed that asking for the victim's labor in the delta is not forced labor in times of needs to reconstruct the community.

The independent scholars and organizations watchdogging Burma's humanitarian needs outside Burma claim that the human rights of the Nargis victims should be integral part of humanitarian relief work, especially in Burma's Cyclone Nargis recovery efforts.

The Burmese government has a extensive record of extreme human rights violations, which are systemic and have various complicated forms.

Kyi May Kaung (Ph.D.) Wrote:
11/04/2009
I believe the Johns Hopkins report.

NGOs have an axe to grind. They need to go in and out and get the co-operation of the junta.

Instead of denying the report, they should aim to prevent abuses.

Droit Delehomme Wrote:
10/04/2009
Oops. Looks like not everyone always agrees with the Soros-funded Johns Hopkins team of old-fashioned human rights folk.





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