The humanitarian assistance community is
gradually forming a consensus that sustainable interventions should focus on
building resilience in order to successfully address the ongoing effects of
natural disasters and complex emergencies as well as to minimize the effects of
new crises.[1] Such attempts often
require working within local government institutions to build local capacity in
health, education, food production, or any one of the many silos that fall
under the sprawling UN Cluster System.
Ideally,
these efforts strengthen the institutions of local and national governments
which represent the interests of the communities they serve. But what happens
when these efforts are undertaken in less than ideal circumstances, as they so
often are? Even a cursory analysis of humanitarian aid financial allocations
shows that there is significant overlap between the places where the largest
amounts of humanitarian assistance are dispersed (Figure 1)
and countries which are repeatedly rated as having an extreme risk for human
rights abuses (Figure 2). Under these
circumstances, it is unavoidable that humanitarian assistance and human rights
advocacy will sometimes conflict with one another.
![]() |
| Figure 1 |
The core principles of humanitarian assistance are built
around those first iterated by the International Committee of the Red Cross: impartiality,
neutrality, and independence.[2] Impartiality demands that
dispersal of assistance must rely solely on the need of the recipients.
Neutrality requires that the organizations that conduct humanitarian operations
not take action in support of nor against any party to a conflict. And independence
necessitates that operations are conducted free of outside influence. The
‘rights-based approach’ to humanitarian assistance acknowledges fundamental
disparities in resources and power and in many ways directly contradicts all
three of these principles. Acknowledging that specific populations (such as
those prone to gender-based violence[3]) may be disadvantaged
because of inequities could challenge the notion of impartial assessment of
need. In a conflict where one or more parties are actively committing
atrocities, a human rights-based approach might demand that humanitarian
organizations do away with neutrality in order to advocate against abuses. And
the need for sustainability in interventions may necessitate working with local
communities and governments in order to build capacity and resilience.[4]
![]() |
| Figure 2 |
When working in countries with a history of human rights
abuses, humanitarian assistance organizations must therefore choose between two
equally difficult approaches. Either an organization can entirely embrace the
humanitarian principles, working impartially, neutrally, and independently. But
as Alex De Waal says, “sending relief is a weapon of first resort: popular at
home, usually unobjectionable abroad, and an excuse for not looking more deeply
into underlying political problems.”[5] These organizations can do their part, pack
up, and head home, and will do so again and again in the same parts of the
world because they choose to ignore the underlying inequities that underpin the
global system, creating fault lines for economic, social, and political unrest
and consistent vulnerability to environmental extremes. NGOs can also choose a
human rights-based approach, seeking to tackle disparities both locally and
systematically in a hybrid of activism and service delivery. But they will be
seen as representatives of western powers pursuing an agenda of globalized
ethical norms that may in practice be anti-traditional. This in turn may
further undermine the notion of humanitarian neutrality for all organizations,
regardless of their view on these issues.
The issue of neutrality is of specific importance because
it is critical to gaining access to many populations in the direst need.
Whether in Sudan, Central African Republic, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Syria,
Iraq, Afghanistan, or Yemen, humanitarian space is gradually being eroded by
the perception that aid organizations are working with and for Anglo-American
and European interests. The populations affected by conflict were the raison d'être for humanitarian aid in the first place, and the
rights-based approach threatens to cut off practitioners from this population.
Furthermore, it is hard to say where the rights-based approach is to end. If a
country is actively committing genocide, would an international NGO be
philosophically required to support armed intervention to end the conflict on
behalf of the targeted disparate population? The end result might only be that
increased mortality is more broadly distributed across the population, as
occurred in Somalia or Kosovo[6].
Similarly, neutrality and impartiality can lead to compromises that are
similarly abhorrent to the humanitarian ideal. For example, distribution of
food aid to both victims and perpetrators of the Rwandan Genocide, employment
of local nationals as staff who were likely linked to warlords in Somalia.[7]
Organizations that switch in-between
these roles will necessarily be undermined by their past history. Médecins Sans
Frontières would have a very
difficult time operating clinics in territory controlled by the Taliban if they
had a long history of advocating abortion and other contraceptive rights for
women. Similarly, Human Rights Watch would hardly be considered an
authoritative advocacy organization if they had previously compromised with the
regime of Bashar Al-Assad in order to gain access to Syrian prisons. Both types
of organizations are needed in the humanitarian space, but they must also
remain separated, since their principles are fundamentally at odds. The most
logical response to this reality is that organizations must pick a clearly
defined role and stick to it, or risk losing their institutional credibility.
This is the only way that the humanitarian and human rights-based organizations
can continue to do their respective work, coexisting in countries with a
history of human rights abuses, for the people that need them the most.
[1] Smillie, I. (2001). Patronage
or partnership: Local capacity building in humanitarian crises. IDRC.
[2] McGoldrick, C. (2011). The future
of humanitarian action: An ICRC perspective. International Review of the Red
Cross, 93(884), 965-991.
[3] Liljestrand J. Sex selection,
gender-based violence and human rights abuse. Acta obstetricia et gynecologica
Scandinavica. 2008;87:482-482.
[4] Choi, B. C., McQueen, D. V., Puska, P., Douglas, K. A.,
Ackland, M., Campostrini, S., ... & Corber, S. J. (2008). Enhancing global
capacity in the surveillance, prevention, and control of chronic diseases:
seven themes to consider and build upon. Journal
of epidemiology and community health,62(5), 391-397.
[5] Alex De Waal, Famine Crimes
(Oxford: Indiana University Press, 1997).
[6] Kernot, S. (2006). Humanitarian
intervention: Human rights versus humanitarian assistance. Global Change, Peace
& Security, 18(1), 41-55.
[7] Kernot, S. (2006). Humanitarian
intervention: Human rights versus humanitarian assistance. Global Change, Peace
& Security, 18(1), 41-55.



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