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July 2012

Africa's Development is Hindered by Disease

The high cost of treating certain diseases, most notably HIV/AIDS, when coupled with the indirect costs resulting from lost worker productivity, is having a serious negative impact on African economies. More effort needs to be made to increase primary care, especially in rural areas, accompanied by health promotion, disease prevention and improved education for all ages.

The African continent is the region of the world most affected by the HIV/AIDS pandemic, which is reversing decades of improvement in life expectancy, educational progress, and economic growth. For example, in Lesotho , where life expectancy was 60 years in 1995, life expectancy had plummeted to 35 years in 2010. In Sub-Saharan Africa, where life expectancy was 62, because of HIV/AIDS it is now 47.
Because teachers in rural areas in developing countries have better salaries than the local population they travel more and tend to develop sexual relationships with students and local women, some of whom are already HIV infected. As a result, HIV/AIDS is killing teachers at a faster rate than replacements can be trained.

In Zambia , it has been found that two teachers die for every one that graduates from training school. The pandemic affects not only the supply of teachers but the quality and management of education at local, regional and national levels.

A World Bank report estimates that HIV/AIDS may reduce growth in GDP by 1% a year in some sub-Saharan African countries, due to the continuing loss of skilled and unskilled workers in the prime of life. In South Africa HIV/AIDS may depress GDP by as much as 17% over the next decade. In addition, HIV/AIDS is estimated to have decreased agricultural output by as much as 20 percent in many African countries. According to experts’ predictions, by 2015 South Africa will have 50 million fewer people than in a no-HIV/AIDS scenario.

Public health officials still have to deal with the stigma of AIDS that persists in most African countries. Progress in raising AIDS awareness has been slow despite the efforts in education and the work of non-governmental organizations. In addition, progress has been hindered, particularly in rural areas, because health services and infrastructure are inadequate and the lack of trained medical personnel is widespread. If health care systems are to be effective, resources must be redirected from curative care in urban settings with high tech equipment to primary and preventive care.

HIV/AIDS is not the only concern. South Africa has the highest tuberculosis death rate per capita worldwide, followed by Zimbabwe and Mozambique . There is concern about the increasing number of cases of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR) as well as extensively drug-resistant (XDR) tuberculosis in several countries.

Many diseases affecting both children and adults could be addressed with minimum resources if they were employed strategically. Diarrhea and respiratory infections, measles, malaria and malnutrition represent the greatest threats to children's health. Malaria is the leading cause of death among African children under five years old. It is estimated that African women are approximately 175 times more likely to die during childbirth and pregnancy than women in industrialized countries.

Health problems are made worse by the lack of health professionals, which is due in part to the continuing exodus of doctors and nurses to industrialized nations. In addition to problems directly related to the health sector, corruption drains critical resources needed to improve people's health and education.
It has been estimated that corruption costs the African economies more than 148 billion dollars a year. As a comparison, Sub-Saharan countries received $15 billion in development aid in 2011. The widespread practice of bribing government officials by foreign companies must be curtailed. With this goal in mind, industrialized nations should enforce national and international laws that deal with this issue.

In the last few years, emphasis has been placed on economic aid to Africa . African countries, however, need a different kind of aid. They need their human resources to be trained in their own countries, they need more help in preventing major diseases, they need more education for all age levels, and they need better conditions of trade for their products. African countries do not need more monetary aid given irresponsibly, which ends up in the pockets of government officials and members of the countries’ elites.

César Chelala is an international public health consultant. He has carried out health-related missions in 50 countries worldwide, many of them in Africa.

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Mongolia’s LGBT Centre Advocates for Anti-Discrimination Law

Twenty years after Mongolia dismantled communism, changed to a free market economy and installed elections, the country is ranked by the Economic Intelligence Report (EIR) on a democratic scale as 69 out of 167 countries. Mongolia is a democratic beacon surrounded by authoritarian and hybrid regimes. Though not ranked as a “full democracy” yet, Mongolia shares its category of “flawed democracy” with several developed countries, such as France and Italy. According to the Freedom House Index, the country has been rated “free” for the past several years, though problems have been noted in the area of gender as women have had scant representation in parliament. Globally, Mongolia has had one of the lowest representations of women in government at a mere 3.9 percent according to the Intra-Parliamentary Union. However the reinstatement of a quota system this year to 20 percent for electing women in parliament ushered in 12 percent representation in the 2012 parliamentary elections on June 28. The new parliament is in the process of being established.

Despite these impressive gains, the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community is a specific area of gender that still faces a great deal of repression within Mongolia. Freedom House detailed the difficulties the country’s first LGBT non-governmental organization (NGO) faced trying to register with the government. The LGBT Centre—the first human rights-based organization of its kind in the country, though founded in 2007, was denied governmental registration for two years as its name was not seen as “Mongolian” in nature.


Ts. Otgonbaataar representing Mongolia's LGBT Centre in Geneva.
The Executive Director, Otgonbaatar Tsedendemberel, recently relayed the NGO’s struggles for legitimacy at a popular coffee shop in downtown Ulaanbaatar. In 2009, he brought up the problems LGBT people faced at a civil society meeting at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade. The speaker ridiculed him and a number of women’s rights activists present at the meeting stood up challenged the speaker. The conflict put the budding NGO on the international map. Though the registration issue was what the Centre came to be well-known for, Ts. Otgonbaatar says the initial conflict “was not about the registration issue; it was about including LGBT rights issues in the NGO Human Rights Report for the Universal Periodic Review—UPR. It was a meeting of NGOs –one of many meetings that NGOs and civil society had to discuss what issues to be included in the UPR report and what recommendations to give to the Government of Mongolia through the UPR.”

Local women’s groups and the National Human Rights Commission in Mongolia (NHRCM) lobbied on the Centre’s behalf and challenged the registration issue, helped by international organizations. Ts. Otgonbaatar said “Until December 16, 2009, when the Centre was officially registered, we had strong support from international organizations such as IGLHRC, Human Rights Watch, Forum-ASIA, etcetera … and Mongolian organizations and individuals such as NHRCM, Ts. Oyungerel, President’s Adviser on Human Rights and Civil Participation.” The blockage to registration was overcome within the year and granted in December of 2009. “After the registration throughout the UPR lobbying and until now, we work with our women’s and human rights organizations as well as civil society, in particular, Open Society Forum, Center for Human Rights and Development, Globe International, MONFEMNET National Network, National Center Against Violence, etc. “

The LGBT Centre now has strong ties with women’s groups working in the area of gender equality. Ts. Otgonbaatar currently sits on the board of MONFEMNET; an umbrella organization for NGOs dedicated to gender issues within the human rights framework.


Ts. Otgonbaataar talking with Navi Pillay, the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, in Geneva.
The Centre now uses social media to connect with the community and has a website. Mobile phones are used instead of landline telephones as Ts. Otgonbaatar believes their previous hotline was tapped by the General Intelligence Agency in Mongolia. Problems still persist but their official status allows greater alignment with organizations like MONFEMNET and the United Nations’ Office of High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR). However free assembly of Mongolians identifying as LGBT can still be dangerous. While there are a few clubs to go to, they must remain private, as openly advertising their location can bring about negative consequences. After leaving a private party in 2007, Ts. Otgonbaatar and his friends were picked up by a corrections vehicle while trying to flag a taxi home. Corrections vehicles pick up people seen as drunk and disorderly. Mongolia has a high rate of alcoholism as 13 percent of the population are considered alcohol dependent, according the Mongolian Ministry of Health. But Ts. Otgonbaatar saw the situation otherwise. Having lived in Japan for seven years and being used to transparency with police officials, he openly questioned the reasons for the group’s detention. He said that this angered the corrections officers and they released everyone except for himself and a friend also challenging the detention. At this low point, he said he found himself questioning his activism. He eventually moved beyond the experience to become executive director of the Centre, making the decision to be openly out in his sexual orientation to the public.

Ts. Otgonbaatar now hosts a TV show— “We Are Youth”— which tackles mainstream social issues. He credits his success to his grounding in issues beyond LGBT causes, such as education, media and professional legal training. He feels fortunate to have a supportive family as well. Yet for all his personal successes, he believes that the path to ending discrimination lies in establishing an anti-discrimination law—which Mongolia currently lacks.

This law is necessary to lay the foundation to establish due process for discrimination against sexual-orientation issues—as well as minorities, the disabled, the elderly, and women. Establishing this law would further enable the creation of legislation against hate crimes—a serious problem in Mongolia.

Hate crimes committed against LGBT in Mongolia have been instigated in particular by nationalist groups. The Centre shared this issue through a video created in 2010 and released that year at the annual “Through Women’s Eyes” human rights forum organized by MONFEMNET. The 20 minute video— called The Lies of Liberty – LGBT Centre Documentary— details LGBT individuals’ lives, hopes and expectations and can be viewed in seven minute segments on YouTube. While the intention was to educate the public about LGBT issues, there were death threats against a transgender woman who revealed her identity in the video. Other people featured in the clip hid their identities. She eventually left the country due to persecution and death threats from nationalist groups. Hate crimes affect all LGBT, but transgender in particular according to Ts. Otgonbaatar.

Politicians sensitive to gender issues elected in parliament would facilitate the passage of anti-discrimination laws. The perception of LGBT identities as “imported” by foreigners appears to be an obstacle to acceptance. Ts. Otgonbaatar previously stated to Eurasianet—a media group funded by the Open Society Institute—that nationalist attitudes are derived from communism and not Mongolian culture itself, noting that Buddhism and shamanism in Mongolia “tolerated” homosexuality. While tolerance does not denote acceptance, it is a far cry from sexual-orientation being perceived as a national threat. A 2009 study – Resisting resistance: Women and nationalist discourse in Mongolia - presented at the ASA conference by Franck Bille’ on gender perceptions, supports Ts. Otgonbaatar’s beliefs. Bille’ noted that the Soviets used Mongolians’ fear of the Chinese as a method to keep them in line with Soviet expectations and desires. This process of threatening to leave them to their fate with the Chinese - Bille’ argued - created a hyper-nationalistic state of mind where normative heterosexual procreation, in other words marrying and having children, was used as a tool to self-define against a foreign “other.”

Building up the population remains a governmental priority as Mongolia only has about three million people as estimated by CIA Fact Books and is recognized as one of the least densely populated countries in the world. President Ts.Elbegdorj recently gave an orientation to the Ministries of the new government and stated his intention to foster the “improvement of population growth and ancestral roots” through governmental ordinances and subsidizes to legal guardians who either give birth to or adopt a child under age two—as reported by local media on July 6 following the 2012 parliamentary elections.

Population concerns illustrate that nationalism is broad and culturally ingrained—not merely confined to racist groups. Prior to the creation of the LGBT Centre, three sexual health NGOs represented the gay community. Youth for Health has sex education and sexual health services; the Support Center offers counseling and social events for Mongolians to learn about HIV prevention; and the Together Center has free HIV testing and medication for HIV + Mongolians. These organizations operate under the term MSM, or Men who have Sex with Men, but do not address gender identity. Though widely used in sexual health programs, MSM lacks the diversity of LGBT. Funding for these organizations primarily comes from HIV prevention organizations which see sex as a behavior. While MSM can be a useful umbrella term for alternative sexual orientations without challenging mainstream views, it does not adequately serve effeminate males, transgender women and men, and lesbians—nor does it address human rights issues.

The United Nations’ Office of High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), COC Netherlands, Forum-ASIA and Open Society Forum in Mongolia has been highly supportive of the Centre’s work, sending Ts. Otgonbaatar to Geneva to learn and network at UN meetings. He currently documents cases of imprisonment and abuses using the UNHCR human-rights framework. When asked how many people have died due to LGBT discrimination, he says it is difficult to verify as suicides and victims of violence tend to be covered up by the families, who list other causes of death.

Ts. Otgonbaatar has found his media presence to be highly useful at connecting him with a wider audience. The “We Are Youth” TV show has been running for eight years and he has been hosting it every Tuesday since March of 2011. Mongolia has a very young population as one third of all Mongolians are under age 25, according to government statistics. This demographic can be key to challenging the current political system. Though it focuses on mainstream social issues, he said “the TV [show] started focusing on human rights issues since I took over. I sometimes address discrimination in a wider sense, not only on discrimination against LGBT people. Too much emphasis on LGBT rights and discrimination might distance the viewers from the show.”

When asked about his thoughts on the recent election, Ts. Otgonbaatar says “As for the election results, I am more or less glad that there are more women in the parliament now—from three to nine—especially including some strong voices from the Democratic party, Ts. Oyungerel, and Civil Will and Green Party, S. Oyun. On the other hand, it was a significant election in the sense that the most powerful civil society representatives/pioneers raced for the election from the Civil Movement Party. In the next four years, civil society will maintain its momentum and definitely run for the parliamentary election in 2016 with more experience and hopefully with a lot of success. Those candidates representing minorities such as people with disabilities, ethnic minorities, sexual minorities, etc should be given a chance to reflect the views and needs of their corresponding communities.”

With greater political representation, hopefully anti-discrimination legislation will come soon for Mongolians; representing further growth in the country’s standing as a democracy in Asia.

This article originally appeared in the UB Post newspaper in July in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, following the 2012 parliamentary elections.

When Babies are the Victims

The recent conviction of two former Argentine dictators for their role in baby thefts brings to my mind a meeting I had in 1991 with Adriana Calvo de Laborde, an Argentine physicist who in 1977 had been imprisoned by the military while she was six and a half months pregnant. I asked her to tell me her story and after some initial refusal to do so
- on the grounds that she had been luckier than most of her friends in prison - she told me what had happened to her and the role that one of my medical colleagues, Dr. Jorge A. Bergés, had had in her mistreatment.

“I was in prison when my daughter Teresa was born,” Laborde told me. “The day that happened – it was April 15, 1977 - in spite of the cold weather, the fear, the pain I was having, and also in spite of the filth surrounding me, I had felt the need to wash myself up. This was ludicrous, since I had already been in prison for more than two months and during all that time I had been unable even to take a shower.

“That day, however, I pulled off my dress and began to sew it. I then washed my underwear and began to pull the hairs off my legs. Since I didn’t have the means to do it properly, I scratched my fingers against the cement walls so that they would become rough enough to pull out the hairs in my legs. As soon as I finished, I started having labor pains.

Prior to delivering her baby, Laborde had been sharing her prison cell with four other women who, seeing her in pain, called the guard on duty. He refused to come for a long time, but five hours after the contractions began, she was put, blindfolded, with her hands tied behind her back, into the back seat of a car that drove towards Buenos Aires City.

“In the middle of the trip I again had painful contractions and the policemen stopped the car by the roadside. There, in spite of having my hands tied behind my back, I gave birth to Teresa. In the back of the car, sitting next to me, there was a woman named Lucrecia, who had been collaborating with the police. She tried to help me but she was so nervous that instead she hurt me with her nails. Lucrecia asked the men in the front of the car to give her a rag from the glove compartment. They gave her a piece of cloth with which they tied my umbilical cord, but they were unable to cut it. These policemen were taking me to Buenos Aires Province where Dr. Bergés was working at the time.

“When I delivered Teresa I was unable to hold her in my hands because they were still tied up behind my back, so she slipped, crying between my legs, to the floor of the car. When we reached our destination it was late at night and it was very cold. In spite of that, I was kept in the car for almost an hour until Bergés was ready to see me.

“Bergés cut the umbilical cord and ordered the policemen to take me inside the building. I was taken up the stairs to a room where there was a stretcher. At that moment Bergés took off my blindfold and told me, ‘Now you don’t need this.’ He then asked me to lay down in the stretcher, took out the placenta and gave me an injection. He asked the other men for a bucket and a brush and made me clean the stretcher and the floor while my baby –naked and dirty with meconium- was crying on a table with white tiles. I washed myself up and they gave me my little girl, whom I also cleaned. In the meantime, Bergés was smoking quietly while the men who were with him insulted me. At one point I couldn’t stand any longer, lost my temper, and insulted them back.

“Shortly afterwards they left me alone with my daughter. Since I had been imprisoned, that was the first time I could sleep on a bed with a mattress and a cover. I slept soundly until I was awakened by the noise of my baby trying to get rid of the secretions in her nose, something that made me feel tremendously guilty. At dawn, they took me to a cell where I saw friends I had lost track earlier.

“I spent thirteen days without medicines, without clothes, without soap. The only thing I had –but the most important- was the solidarity and help of my friends. We were fed only once every three days, but always one of my cell companions gave me half of her ration. The guards wanted to take my daughter away but I didn’t allow them to do it. I had to fight like a lioness not to let them take her away from me. I had lost all hope of being released when, on April 28, 1977, a group of men came for us in a car and, together with my daughter, we were left in the area of Temperley, Buenos Aires Province, close to my parents’ house.”

After her liberation, Laborde became an ardent advocate for human rights in Argentina, and repeatedly denounced Dr. Bergés’ participation in the torture of detainees. Laborde was the first survivor of the clandestine detention centers who declared against the military in the Trial of the Military Juntas in 1985. In 2004, Dr. Bergés was condemned to seven years in prison.

Cesar Chelala is a co-winner of an Overseas Press Club of America award for “Missing or Dead in Argentina: The Desperate Search for Thousands of Abducted Victims,” a cover story for The New York Times Magazine.

Africa Fashion Week New York

Adirée Presents
Africa Fashion Week New York
WHERE FASHION BEGAN
Broad Street Ballroom
41 Broad Street, New York, NY
July 12 – 14, 2012

Africa Fashion Week New York is a luxury multi-day event including runway shows, vendor exhibitions, and industry networking events with the sole purpose of raising awareness of the African Fashion/Entertainment professionals in New York and the Tri-State area. Buyers and industry influencers will be previewed to established and emerging African designers.

For more information, visit www.adiree.com/africa-fashion-week-new-york

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New Relationships

We stepped off the bus and ran across the busy night road. A woman officer opened the small door to a compound that served as police headquarters for a large metropolis located in the southern Terai region. The walkway to the inner building was dark from a power outage. Our group had come to Nepal to research challenges to peace building.

The superintendent graciously agreed to answer our questions about activities in his jurisdiction. After a few statements about gender disparity in the police force and the status of trafficking, the superintendent made a statement that captured my attention.

“Government now works for the people. In the past it was feudal so everyone worked for the government.”


Overlooking Rolpa Photo Credit: Joel Post
I believe this statement goes to the heart of a major challenge to building peace in Nepal. During our course I had learned that peace building does not just mean rebuilding the destroyed roads or getting guerrilla fighters back to work – it has to include rebuilding relationships. This usually means activities to foster trust between parties in a conflict; but after hearing the police superintendent’s words, I felt Nepal needs a new relationship of trust with democracy, as well as a new connection between politicians and citizens.

Though Nepal has had a tumultuous relationship with democracy at best, it still yearns and fights for it. When our group talked to people in Nepal, there was some disagreement on what type of democracy should be used - a strong executive-presidential system versus a parliamentary-prime minister - but almost everyone was in agreement that representative democracy was the future system of government.

The elected representatives and the party leaders have been overwhelmingly from the upper castes and are usually large landowners, even within the Maoists. The 2008 Constitutional Assembly elections reserved a certain percentage of seats for women, Dalits, and other marginalized or underrepresented groups; but this has not solved the issue of bad governance. We heard from WOREC, a women’s organization in Kathmandu, that women officials are forced to vote with their party line, even if the provision will hurt women. The elites of the political parties are firmly in control and expect their affiliates to do as they are told, much like the relationships that existed even before Nepal began experimenting with democracy.

If democracy and the elected officials are not bringing about real reforms, how does change occur in Nepal, and how does Nepal then create a new relationship with democracy and political leaders? I believe holding corrupt politicians accountable to their constituents and education reform could be steps in the right direction.

During our interviews almost everyone mentioned the rampant corruption in the political system but no one discussed how to curb the practice. It seems to have become an accepted part of the political landscape. Some interviewees said there was nothing to be done since the justice system is tied up at the moment – everyone is waiting for the new constitution. The police superintendent had mentioned that sometimes they catch criminals but are forced by the political parties to release them. I unfortunately did not receive an answer to why this has been allowed and do not know what needs to be done to change this practice. I do think that if politicians are held accountable in a court of law, it may send the message that the politicians work for the people and not the elites in the party leadership.

Education reform could also help strengthen democratic institutions in Nepal. Presently 1/3 of the males and 2/3 of the females are illiterate. It is hard to put pressure on politicians through letters or filing formal complaints when reading is an obstacle and political corruption has reached down to the level of local schools.

While in Bara, our group was able to talk to a local journalist who had filed a report on a school secretary election. Many of the political parties had spent millions of Nepalese rupees in the attempt to sway the election towards their favor – money that could have been spent on educating the students. We were fortunate to meet an organization in Bara, the Jan Jagaran Youth Club, which successfully got some schools in the area designated as zones of peace. This will hopefully restrict political and ideological involvement in education.

At present, political parties control or influence many aspects of Nepalese society instead of being influenced by the Nepalese people. This situation needs to be reversed. People are resorting to bandhs (general strikes) and armed opposition to create the change that democracy was supposed to bring. Some politicians may even be sincere in their efforts to help the people they represent, but are forced to capitulate to the elite party leadership.

I believe a new relationship is needed between citizens and politicians where the citizens can force the parties to work together to create a better Nepal. The citizens must have the power to remind the politicians, “The government now works for the people.”

Joel Post was in Nepal for a two-week field course titled “Challenges to Peacebuilding in Nepal” led by Dr. Pushpa Iyer of the Monterey Institute of International Studies. Joel’s blog is part of a series of reflections by Dr. Iyer and her students on the challenges to building peace in this country after a decade long war. -Ed.

About the author: Joel Post is a graduate student in International Policy Studies – Conflict Resolution at the Monterey Institute of International Studies. He has a B.S. – Education degree from the University of Missouri – Columbia and has over five years of professional experience in Asia.

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Nepal and Its Political Future

In 2006, the king of Nepal was deposed and the country turned from a kingdom to a republic. The power was assumed by the Maoists who several years earlier had started a civil war. Immediately after the overthrow of monarchy, euphoria took over – even politically illiterate people living in the mountain areas discussed politics while looking at rare newspapers. The observed general mood was that the new government was better than the king, and that the Maoists were great.


The hammer and sickle flag flying in Rolpa district, Nepal. Picture credit: Krill Prudnikov
During our trip to Nepal in early 2012, we had the feeling, however, that the euphoria has died out. The Nepali now talk about the Maoists very cautiously and are not as thrilled about them. The most optimistically minded people are saying, "They need time to show what they can do," and "nobody can work without making mistakes, especially not a new government." At the same time, though, in people's words and in the media, dissatisfaction and even the phrase "restoration of the monarchy" can be seen.

The Nepali Maoists are a very interesting phenomenon. Initially, they did not seem to have any relationship to Mao and China. When the movement emerged in Nepal and they called themselves Maoists, official Beijing expressed indignation and reproached the Nepali Maoists for unnecessarily mentioning the name of the Great Leader incorrectly. It seems the Chinese were initially somewhat afraid of the Nepali Maoists because their movement was an extremist one. They were on the list of terrorist organizations in the U.S. and it was not very clear what would happen in Nepal. Beijing wanted to avoid an unstable situation in the country bordering the equally unstable Tibet.

On the other hand, the Chinese provided considerable assistance to the armed separatists in India for the purpose of destabilizing the situation in Nepal. In the 1970s -1980s, the leaders of these separatist movements lived in Beijing, and the soldiers underwent their military training in China. It is logical that the Chinese would benefit from acquiring an ally practically next door to India.

Nepal, however, does not benefit from flirting with China for two reasons. First, when there is faith in communism, there can be no other gods – this is known from history and was demonstrated by the Chinese occupation of Tibet. The Buddhist monks were defrocked and killed, and the monasteries were demolished and air-bombed. The objects of cult were destroyed, with the most valuable, such as the golden Buddha statues, transported to China. Regardless of the overthrown king, Nepal remains in essence a theocratic state. For some time after the king was deposed, the situation in the country was truly unique – the Maoists were at the helm of a Hinduist state. There have already been conflicts between the Maoist government and the Nepali people on religious grounds, with the result that the people, for the time being, have the upper hand. It is paradoxical that many of the Maoists who were born in the mountainous regions of Nepal respect and observe the religious holidays.

Second, for more than 100 years Nepal has been too closely connected to India and is heavily dependent on it. This dependency is brought on, first of all, by geography. Nepal is squeezed between the two Eastern superpowers, India and China, which are in a mutual state of tension. This situation has been going on for 60 years now and has several times turned into direct military confrontation. For that reason, the small country is forced to balance between its big neighbors.

So why is India more important to Nepal than China? First of all, they share a religion – Hinduism. Second of all, politics. For example, when the pro-British prime ministers of the Rana dynasty seized the power in Nepal, the king and his family managed to escape onto the territory of the Indian Embassy and later moved to India with assistance from Delhi. In 1951, the king returned to the throne with help from India. The Indians contributed to the restoration of the Nepali monarchy not only with words but also with actions. The Indian army suppressed later revolts against the king.

India has a very significant influence on the life of Nepal, and it should not be ignored. India is one of the reasons the country may stay stable, for it is hard to see India supporting Nepal’s disintegration. For all its meddling, India calculates that separatist tendencies in other countries in the region could fuel such trends within its own territories, from the North East to the Kashmir. The keyword for India at this time of rapid economic growth is ‘stability’. It is very unlikely to support instability anywhere in the region. Nepal’s political and economic future relies on India. In case of instability in Nepal, India will step in to return to the more ‘stable’ status quo. In my opinion it will be India that will put in place the final piece of the jigsaw puzzle that will be the future political map of the federal Nepal.

Kirill Prudnikov was in Nepal for a two-week field course titled “Challenges to Peacebuilding in Nepal” led by Dr. Pushpa Iyer of the Monterey Institute of International Studies. Kirill’s blog is part of a series of reflections by Dr. Iyer and her students on the challenges to building peace in this country after a decade long war. -Ed.

About the author: Kirill Prudnikov is a graduate student at the Monterey Institute of International Studies pursuing his degree in International Policy Studies with a focus in Conflict Resolution. Kirill’s area interests include cross-cultural negotiations, peacebuilding, international politics, ideology, power and conflict. He received his Bachelor Degree in Conflictology and Philosophy from Saint Petersburg State University.

Was Yasser Arafat Assassinated?

For at least two years before Yasser Arafat’s death in 2004, Uri Avnery, a leading Israeli peace activist, had been warning of the possibility that the Palestinian leader could be assassinated and on the negative effect this would have on the peace process. Now, an investigation carried out by Al Jazeera reveals that Arafat’s final personal belongings had abnormal levels of polonium, a rare, highly radioactive element, and that this was probably the cause of his death.

“While I am writing this, Yasser Arafat is still alive. But his life is hanging on a thread. When we visited him in his bombed out Mukata’a compound in Ramallah, I warned him that Sharon is determined to kill him…Now Sharon believes that he can achieve his aim. He needs only Bush’s approval. Not necessarily a formal confirmation. A subtle hint will suffice. Half a word. A wink.” wrote Avnery in 2001 in Media Monitors Network. Future findings and events would prove him correct.

In 2006, Uri Dan, who had been Sharon’s longtime confidant, published a book in France entitled “Ariel Sharon: An Intimate Portrait,” in which he accused the former Prime Minister of Israel of assassinating Palestinian Authority (PA) President Yasser Arafat by poisoning him. According to Uri Dan, Sharon got President George W. Bush’s approval to proceed with his assassination plan in 2004. At the time, Sharon told President Bush that he was no longer committed to “not” liquidating the Palestinian leader.

Writing for Global Research in 2007, Stephen Lendman, a recipient of a 2008 Project Censored Award from the University of California at Sonoma, stated that Dr. Ashraf Al Kurdi, Arafat’s personal physician for 25 years, believed that Arafat had been poisoned. When Dr. Al Kurdi saw Arafat before he was taken to Paris, where he died on November 11, 2004, he saw a man who had los half of his body weight, had red patches on his face and a metallic yellow color all over his body.

Arafat’s French doctors were unusually evasive about the cause/s of his death. They described a very serious disorder called “Disseminated intravascular coagulation,” (DIC) a pathological activation of the blood clotting mechanism that happens in response to a variety of diseases. It leads to the formation of small clots inside the blood vessels in the body, resulting in the disruption of normal blood flow to critical organs such as the kidneys.

DIC can occur in an acute way or chronically as a result of multiple organ failure leading to death. There are no effective treatment options. An interpretation of its acronym “death is coming” probably refers to this circumstance and to the high mortality associated with this condition. Arafat’s French doctors refused to acknowledge what was the underlying cause of Arafat’s death. Dr. Francois Bochud, director of the Institut de Radiophysique in Lausanne, Swizerland, where the analysis of Arafat’s clothes took place confirmed that unexplained, high amounts of polonium-210 had been found in his belongings.

Arafat has not been the only political figure apparently killed by radioactive polonium. The most notorious victim was Alexander Litvinenko, a Russian spy who later became a dissident and who died in London of a lingering illness. An inquiry conducted by British intelligence later proved that he had been poisoned with polonium slipped into his tea.

There are so few recorded cases similar to these, however, that there is still no consensus about the typical symptoms. However, both Litvinenko and Arafat suffered from severe diarrhea, weight loss and vomiting in the days and weeks previous to their deaths. An American study conducted in 1991 found that the poison probably acts by activating the “vomiting center” in the brainstem.

Uri Avnery’s writing in 2002 was premonitory. “The murder of Arafat is the murder of all chances for peace. That is a crime against the Israeli people. It will condemn us to making war for decades, perhaps for generations to come, perhaps forever. The moral, social and economic decline that we are experiencing now everywhere in Israel will drag Israel down to new depths and to the emigration of many.” So far, events have proven him right.

Dr. Cesar Chelala is a winner of an Overseas Press Club of America award.

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Money & Mountains: Tourism as a Tool for Development in Nepal

“Tourism can be a tool for development in Nepal...people that travel bring money to remote areas...[it] leads to alleviation of starvation and health challenges,” said one of the owners of 3 Sisters Adventure Trekking in Pokhara. It is not very often that anyone elaborates beyond a simple declaration that Nepal needs development. In most of the interviews our group conducted, people described challenges facing post-war Nepal under the umbrella of what we commonly call “human development.” A local peace committee member in the Rupandehi district told us, “A hungry stomach cannot think peace with the mind.” In the districts of Rupandehi and Rolpa we were informed that the root causes of the decade long civil war were related to socio-economic issues. The head of the Local Peace Committee in Liwang announced that, “Peace is development.” He defined his concept of development by saying that, “...[development is when] all people are well-off... equal distribution of wealth and equality is peace.”


The Himalayan Range Photo Credit: Raymond Aycock
Not many people were able to give concrete examples and plans for what would constitute development in Nepal. Among the grassroots organizations and local NGOs there were buzzwords such as ‘hydro electric power’ and ‘vocational training,’ but it was difficult to get anyone to clearly articulate how any specific program was going to be successfully and sustainably implemented. Even when pushed, many respondents would express frustration at the political parties’ involvement in every activity that took place across the country rather than detail an idea or concept that could bring about the development they initially expressed they needed.

3 Sisters Adventure Trekking in Pokhara proved to be an exception to the rule. The company articulated and demonstrated a model for using tourism as a tool for development. They run a guesthouse for tourists, they employ female guides, and they oversee a training program for underprivileged women to become trekking guides. Their business also funds an NGO called Empowering Women of Nepal that runs a children’s home for girls and provides scholarships for women in Western Nepal training to be midwives.

This company started when three sisters - Lucky, Dicky and Nicky Chhetri - saw an opportunity to get involved in the tourism/trekking industry. According to the documentary “Trailblazers: Women in the Trekking Industry of Nepal,” Dicky Chhetri states, “People always laughed at us.” In spite of public ridicule, the women completed training for becoming trekking guides and eventually started their own trekking company. After starting their company they discovered a large number of female tourists who had felt discomfort and faced harassment from male guides and porters along the Himalayan trails. These women were among the first customers, and today women trekkers still make up a substantial portion of the sisters’ clientele.

The sisters used their success in the tourism sector to develop a program for training underprivileged Nepalese women in the trekking industry. We were informed during our interview with the company in Pokhara that “Women do not need sympathy. We need education and opportunity.” Initially it was difficult to recruit women because people were afraid that working in the tourism industry was to be a sex worker. In the documentary Nicky states that “...the culture is very strong here...” However, through persistence and hard work the sisters have developed a successful training program that allows young women from Nepal to find financial independence and freedom from the limitations of the structural repression that is found throughout the country.

In terms of tourist attractions, Nepal has an impressive array of offerings. There is the obvious draw - the highly visible Himalayan range that stretches across northern Nepal. The Siddhartha highway through the Hill region is one of the most beautiful drives in the world. There are also several UNESCO World Heritage sites and a wealth of temples and sacred spaces that add to the rich diversity of culture that attracts tourists across the globe.

The 2009 Nepal Tourism Sector Analysis states that tourism “became the leading industry in Nepal in 1983.” So now, after thirty years of developing this industry, it is puzzling to see Nepal rank 112 out of 139 countries analyzed in the 2011 Travel and Tourism Competitiveness Report by the World Economic Forum.

A report entitled “Tourism Cluster in Nepal,” published by the Harvard Business School and the Kennedy School of Government, cites one of the main obstacles to developing tourism in Nepal as “poor marketing and positioning.” The slogan for Nepal’s year of tourism is, “Once is not enough.” I never heard this slogan until after I was back at home doing further research on the topic. Apart from our discussions about tourism with the 3 Sisters Adventure Trekking in Pokhara, which received 52 percent of the tourists in 2008 according to the Nepal Tourism Board, we did not hear anyone speak about tourism as a possibility for furthering development.

The Nepal Tourism Report recommends that new tourist areas need to be developed. They advise that tax incentives be created and infrastructure be developed in districts where it was either destroyed during the war or never developed at all. I was standing in the Dolokha district looking at the Himalyan peak, Gauri Shankar, and wondering why more tourists were not milling about as I had seen them in Kathmandu and Pokhara. One obvious reason was the aching tailbone I had from the ride up the mountain on a road that only had room for one car at a time.

The Tourism Report suggests using a specialized police force to ensure smooth and safe travel for tourists. We were warned several times on our trip that there might be a strike which would close down the roads and prevent freedom of movement for everyone. Though a sign in our bus read “tourist,” we were told that it may or may not have any affect on the situation. A local peace committee member in the Dolokha district stated that “the war is not over.” She went on to explain that she meant the political parties used strikes to effectively shut down the country in order to manipulate certain political situations to their advantage.

In spite of these challenges that confront the development of Nepal’s tourist industry, the 3 Sisters Trekking Company seems to be thriving. They began their business at the same time that the People’s War was declared, yet they have survived and even thrived over a period of ten years. Their business model and approach to a sustainable tourist business provides a blueprint for other organizations to adapt and implement for their own success. Tourism can be of great benefit to Nepal. It remains to be seen whether the government of Nepal will facilitate its growth or implement policies to benefit the whole of Nepal.

Raymond Aycock was in Nepal for a two-week field course titled “Challenges to Peacebuilding in Nepal” led by Dr. Pushpa Iyer of the Monterey Institute of International Studies. Raymond’s blog is part of a series of reflections by Dr. Iyer and her students on the challenges to building peace in this country after a decade long war. -Ed.

About the author: Raymond Aycock is currently a Master's candidate at the Monterey Institute of International Studies focusing on the study of conflict resolution, and is particularly interested in movements, great and small, that resist the dominant discourse regarding development and modernity.

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The Rampant Spread of Corruption in Post-War Nepal

Corruption can be seen in any society throughout the world, often alongside power and following war.

While researching challenges to peacebuilding for two weeks in Nepal in a group, I learned a significant amount about various subjects, but after witnessing grassroots corruption outside Pokhara early on, I began to focus on corruption. After a long day of traveling, our bus stopped in a long line of traffic in a small town. A short while later, we found out that a car ran a motorcycle off the road, injuring the driver, who had fled the scene. Members of the community stopped traffic in both directions for hours demanding reparations, maybe half of which would go to the family.

Corruption disperses through Nepali structures and society like a disease. The starting point is at the top, in the national government, where it is most rampant. From there it spreads downward to the lower levels of authority such as the local Village Development Committees and the police. Finally, it spreads down again to people on the ground. This happens because corruption at the top makes people wealthy and powerful, creating the imitation effect.


Stealing electricity, Southern Nepal Photo Credit: Alex Free
In interviews, I heard about corruption hampering development efforts in Nepal, a statement proven true through observation. I would often hear people in rural NGOs or local government agencies telling about funds for development or wartime reparations being siphoned off along the way. The infrastructure of Nepal is clearly lacking due to minimal funds as roads, schools, and buildings are often never finished, much less started. While visiting a school in a rural village with significantly more students than seats, the group was informed that they were lucky to have more than just a school on paper even if it is too small, dark, and covered in graffiti.

A major focus around the discussion of corruption in Nepal had to do with power. Which then raises a number of questions. I believe that the most important question is in regards to the constitution writing process. Once the CPN(M) leads the CA to a complete constitution, will they be re-elected and what will happen to corruption based on these results? A second question is: how long will development continue to suffer because of corruption and can the Nepali people rise up and demand a change? Based on what I observed, the practice of corruption and a lack of development are issues that have been around since long before the war and thus are not destined to change any time soon. This civil war was one early step towards beginning to reform the country; ending the massive disconnect that is apparent throughout Nepal and removing the tendency towards isolation both internationally and domestically are far off still.

A third question is whether or not the international community will get involved in the situation in Nepal. The Nepali government is pushing the international community and the UN away refusing their help during this period of transition. Nepal has a history of dealing with its own issues because of the barriers to entry and lack of colonization. Even now, sandwiched between India and China, Nepal chooses to deal with its issues on its own. Therefore, considering corruption is having such a negative effect on development in Nepal, will they allow the international community or regional neighbors to play a role? I believe that, in the long run, Nepal will take a role of joining with one of their neighbors and playing it against the other in order to gain some help domestically and regional power. As a small but well-endowed country, Nepal is holding plenty of cards should the government choose to use them positively, such as the beautiful Himalayas and the second-highest hydroelectric potential globally.

In the end, Nepal still has a long way to go in the battle against corruption. That is not to say that the country is not making progress however. As mentioned, corruption is a staple of humanity - it is present in all societies and particularly in post-war societies. Nepal is not an exception, but is at the beginning of its fight. There are mechanisms in place such as the Commission of the Investigation for the Abuse of Authority (CIAA) even if it is not being utilized and the leadership positions are not being filled currently. Also, few high level indictments have taken place recently. There are questions as to whether these indictments were done in the name of moving forward against corruption or eliminating some competition in the CA, but at least an example is being made.

It is important to keep in perspective that, although corruption is a major challenge for Nepal, all it takes is one person or group of people to make a positive move against corruption, or perhaps enough discontent to create an opportunity to rise up from the bottom level. Nepal is a democracy, but this will only remain relevant if the people remain active and civil society takes hold.

Alex Free was in Nepal for a two-week field course titled “Challenges to Peacebuilding in Nepal” led by Dr. Pushpa Iyer of the Monterey Institute of International Studies. Alex’s blog is part of a series of reflections by Dr. Iyer and her students on the challenges to building peace in this country after a decade long war. -Ed.

About the author: Alex Free is a graduate student of International Policy Studies with a focus on Conflict Resolution at the Monterey Institute of International Studies. He received his Bachelor's in International Affairs from The University of Colorado in 2009 and his interests include post-war development and governance.

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“Waiting for Helicopters?” Cholera, Prejudice, and the Right to Water in Haiti (Part II)

“Where you stand,” goes an old Haitian proverb, “depends on where you sit.” This article, the second in a series, will examine aid workers’ stereotypes and prejudices about residents of displacement camps in post-earthquake Haiti, stemming from acute disconnect between NGOs and the people they are there to work with. We explore how these misperceptions have perpetuated deliberate decisions to deny water and sanitation services to desperate survivors.

The context is complicated by the transnational flow of both bacteria and aid dollars. Scientists have shown that the cholera pathogen came to Haiti in the bodies of foreign UN troops whose military base was dumping its sewage into a nearby river. The imported disease has claimed more than 7,000 lives and continues to ravage communities across Haiti. Two and a half years since the 2010 earthquake, the country still faces a severe dearth of water and sanitation services, further fueling the epidemic. The crisis is playing out among the nearly 400,000 internally displaced people (IDPs) still living in makeshift camps under tarps or torn tents, an ideal environment for cholera. The situation raises serious questions: why, with billions of dollars in post-earthquake aid and hundreds of humanitarian NGOs in the country, do so many people still lack the most basic of services? What factors are guiding NGOs’ decisions to provide or withhold them?

The first article of this series described how NGOs in Haiti decided to relax humanitarian standards for provision of water and sanitation and to deliberately withhold these essential services in IDP camps, in the middle of the epidemic. By spring of 2011, the WASH cluster (the UN-run group of NGOs coordinating water and sanitation response) had decided to terminate water provision. It had also decided to abandon the international minimum requirement of 20 people per toilet, instead setting a goal of 100 people per toilet. Predictably, cholera surged, as it has done again in the rainy season of 2012. What were NGO officials’ underlying perceptions and attitudes that could lead them to such decisions? Here, we describe more results from a study I conducted in 2011, based on 52 interviews with officials from NGOs and residents of displacement camps.

“Everyone Stopped Waiting for Aid”


A camp resident empties one of many cups collecting leaking rainwater in her shelter. Photo: Benn Depp, www.bendepp.com
Stopping in the middle of an interview, one camp resident and mother of three looked me squarely in the eye and asked: “Who would like to live under a tent for one year with the heat, sun, and rain falling, water passing under your tent soaking all your clothes? …Do you think anybody would like to live this kind of life?”

People in camp after camp used nearly the same words in describing day-to-day life. While IDP camps have been the main locale for earthquake-affected Haitians to rebuild their lives and communities, this rebuilding has been fraught with suffering. The majority of camp residents I interviewed said they were skeptical they’d ever receive more services from non-governmental organizations (NGOs), but they stayed in the camps because the scraps of tents and the fragile communities of interdependence that had emerged were their last resort – their only option for survival. “As of six months ago people stopped waiting for aid and left,” said one camp resident in early 2011. “Those that are here are those who can’t return home, who don’t have anything.”

During the rainy season, most of the homes I sat in leaked water through the makeshift roof and gushed water through muddy gaps between ground and plastic. Many had to be re-hoisted, re-tied, re-sewed, re-hammered after every storm. Although families kept the areas outside their homes tidy, nearby drainage ditches brought all manners of trash and debris as daily gifts. In the majority of camps, respondents stated they had nowhere else to go, and an International Organization for Migration (IOM, a coordinating agency) survey of more than 15,000 camp dwellers concluded the same, stating “94 per cent of people living in camps would leave if they had alternative accommodation.” Part of the difficulty is that 80% of camp residents were renting homes before the earthquake, which made return extremely difficult given the massive post-earthquake surge in rental prices and the bleak job market.

But how did NGO officials perceive the situation?

“Waiting for Houses, Cars, Helicopters”

In their interviews, foreign officials from NGOs and IOM expressed the belief that Haitians could handle the camp conditions and were simply waiting for handouts. Many officials stated that they viewed signs of day-to-day survival in the camps – such as women selling coffee on the street and families scrounging up building materials from friends – as proof that life was back to normal. Where these efforts may have provided the coffee vendor with enough money to purchase some water for her kids or bought the family an extra week before their shelter collapsed for the fourth time, many NGO officials touted them as “coping mechanisms” which indicated that camp residents were doing fine on their own. One official evoked the racist hypothesis that Haitians were “genetically strong” given the “horrendous conditions” such as “slavery and torture” they had endured over centuries. “You or I would not survive one month in one of those camps,” she said.

IOM officials suggested that a large percentage of displaced people actually had the means to return to their former homes, but remained in camps waiting for NGOs to bestow miracles. They were “waiting for houses, cars, helicopters,” complained one, and “visas to Canada” quipped another. One senior IOM official enthusiastically but incorrectly asserted that only 30% of IDPs were renting homes before the quake, that the majority had land they could return to. Another high-level IOM official, somehow missing the fact that the job market was devastated and rental costs drastically inflated, commented, “We have to be careful because if they had the money to rent before, why now they don’t have it?” Suspicion often won out, with worries that camp residents were systematically conning the system. Many officials I interviewed expressed a fear that camps would persist indefinitely. Since no one has offered residents an alternative, this could be a realistic fear, but one officials responded to by retracting services so people would disperse, rather than pushing more vehemently for comprehensive housing solutions.

Officials actually worried about overprovision of services as a “pull factor” into camps. Services “are like a magnet to keep people there,” said one aid worker. Another went as far as saying, “In truth, if you scratch the surface, people find a way to obtain new lodging.” Many officials I interviewed expressed the same opinion, and a few all but stopped short of explicitly labeling camp residents conniving and conspiratorial. This is alarming for a number of reasons. For one, it paints the camps as some sort of cornucopia of services, when in reality most residents continue to struggle for the most basic of needs. It also minimizes the experiences of earthquake survivors living outside camps in conditions desperate enough that they might move to a camp just for a bucket of water every once in a while. In allowing “pull factor” mentality to dilute their commitment to providing services, NGOs could keep water and sanitation out of reach of both camp residents and their desperate neighbors.

In an unfortunately common case of reverse psychology, a management-level official argued that WASH services were sufficient in the camps since “people didn’t riot and there wasn’t mass outbreak of diarrheal disease.” When my research partner raised an eyebrow and brought up cholera, he responded, “Well, that one didn’t happen in the camps, and it hasn’t wiped out camps either.” Although the official admitted that he hadn’t talked to any camp residents, he said, “I think they’re pretty pleased.” Meanwhile, not only have cases been documented in which entire camps dispersed specifically due to cholera, but this should hardly be the minimum qualifier for concern. Another like-minded IOM official’s observation that “When you go to a camp during daytime almost no one is there,” led him to conclude, “they all take back their work they had before.” Although they do not represent the majority, it is telling that such opinions openly exist among key decision-makers in the WASH response who are clearly placing their presumptions above real knowledge of camp conditions.

Mistrust and the idea that camp residents are doing fine have made it all the easier to neglect humanitarian standards and human rights. It’s another iteration of how the resilience of a people can be used against them. If they’re somehow surviving, the logic goes, they can take more, and make do with less.

Esaie Jean Jules of the Solino Neighborhood Assembly, a grassroots group involved in cholera response, didn’t mince words in putting the pieces together: “One measure NGOs have taken to get people to leave the camps is to take away provision of water and sanitation,” he said this past April. “It’s been almost six months since anyone has come to de-sludge the latrines, but people are still using them. People don’t have access to any other option. There are almost 2,000 people, all who lost their homes in the earthquake, in one of the camps in Solino. They share 4 toilets. There’s no dignity in that, and when it comes to cholera, it’s a danger.”

“An Agenda, a Plan, a Program”

There are reasons why NGO officials don’t really take to heart the experiences of those living in displacement camps. There’s very little dedicated time and space for honest contact and discussion between the two parties. As if in a war zone, NGO rules often restrict their employees from walking on the street, barricading them in offices or air-conditioned SUVs. This is based largely on perceptions rather than reality: Haiti actually has among the lowest homicide rates in the region. Camp residents, in their interviews, often decried these measures as a sign of disrespect and distrust.

Camp residents also told me they have little to no input in the decisions made regarding their own camps. I used a checklist to ask camp committee leaders about their involvement in many steps of the project process. Of these, the only actual role residents were usually allowed in sanitation projects was cleaning the toilets and determining where toilets would be placed. While this seems more like NGOs pawning off the most undesirable or mundane tasks onto camp residents, aid workers described this to us as community “participation.” More active aspects of the project process, such as deciding how to carry out the project or follow-up, designing a system for maintenance, or even deciding how many toilets and what kind, were not up for input by camp residents. While NGO officials described meetings they held to discuss these issues, camp residents countered that they had little actual say in these meetings. They were “obliged” to take whatever they got, however they got it. They had opinions on the way toilets were being installed and maintained in their own camps, and on the system as a whole. They wanted information on how and why the system worked the way it did. But, beyond informing the NGO representative - assuming such a representative showed up, understood them, and relayed the message - camp residents had little means to convey their opinions.

One camp resident summed up the sentiments the majority of residents expressed to me: “[NGO officials] come with an agenda, a plan, a program. They can always find people who are clients for them who help execute the plan. But they don’t meet with the majority of the committee to identify needs.”

“The Meetings Are Almost Always in English…”

If displaced people have little say in programs being run in their camps, they have even less at the level of aid coordination and management. I asked if camp residents knew about the cluster system, the UN-run meetings where NGOs made decisions regarding not only water and sanitation but also provision of all basic post-quake services. None of the camp residents interviewed from any of the 16 camps knew what the cluster system was. The vast majority of residents reported that they do not receive information about how the UN and NGOs make decisions regarding them.

From our observations, the classic cluster meeting, for at least a year after the earthquake, looked like this: 20 to 30 people crowded around a few tables, some 80% from the US or Europe, speaking in a mix of English and French, communicating through powerpoint presentations and humanitarian aid jargon. The clusters’ exclusion of local people and groups drew criticism in the weeks following the earthquake, as it has after previous disasters elsewhere in the world. Yet this exclusion was so consistent, and the meetings so culturally comfortable to them, that aid workers came to see it as the norm. Several agency officials, in fact, explained that the cluster was not designed for camp residents to be present, that clusters were meetings for NGOs to speak with each other. A few wondered aloud how camp residents could be invited to participate given that the meetings could turn unwieldy, and some argued that the camp residents are in fact represented, since the NGOs speak on their behalf. Only three respondents stated that lack of participation was a real concern for them.

The result is that displaced people are simply not present to express the challenges they face and to advocate for solutions of their own creation. This exclusion was replicated at a number of other levels in post-earthquake decision-making and planning (more on this in the next article).

For most NGO officials, suspicion and misperceptions are not due to ill intentions – many work long hours and aspire to help those in need – but to the extreme disconnect between their institutions and Haitians’ reality on the ground. This, combined with the fact that management-level officials can hold prejudiced, sometimes downright racist beliefs, inevitably spills over into agencies’ decision-making in the form of denial of services and exclusion.

NGOs may claim that they cannot continue providing services indefinitely. Notwithstanding the fact that many are still sitting on (some even making interest on) the funds they raised for Haiti, this is understandable in the long term. But instead of responding by abandoning the people they’ve assumed responsibility for, they could step up in their role as advocates, pushing for long-term reconstruction and housing policies, for the changes in foreign policy that Haitians are demanding, and for the international community’s follow-through on its pledges. Some groups, such as Doctors without Borders and Partners in Health, have been doing this all along.

What are the solutions that Haitians are asking for? And how can NGOs adopt models that are driven by these demands? The next article will take a look at some of the inspiring examples of community engagement that Haitian grassroots groups are promoting, as well as the exceptional international NGOs that have followed their lead. We also look at how the dynamics I describe here are the continuation of historic trends that often implicate our government, here in the US – down to the reason why cholera was able to gain a foothold in Haiti in the first place.

Sign these petitions telling the UN to take responsibility for introducing cholera into Haiti and to help stop the epidemic: Just Foreign Policy Petition & Baseball in the Time of Cholera Petition.

Respondents’ names are not given as interviews for the study were conducted anonymously. Esaie Jean Jules was interviewed separately by Alexis Erkert. The study described was part of a Master’s thesis at the Harvard School of Public Health. For a copy of the full paper, contact deepa.otherworlds@gmail.com. Special thanks to Professor Stephen Marks and Silvan Vesenbeckh at the Harvard School of Public Health, Professor Mark Schuller at the City University of New York, and Ben Depp for sharing his remarkable photography.

[i] Financial Edge. (2011, April 29). Where's The Next Housing Bubble? and Sasser, B. (2011, March 18). Haiti's housing bubble, more pressing to some than election or Aristide. Christian Science Monitor .

[ii] Schuller, M. (2011). “Met Ko Veye Ko”: Foreign Responsibility in the Failure to Protect Against Cholera and Other Man-made Disasters. Retrieved April 17, 2011 from IJDH: http://ijdh.org/archives/16896

[iii] Lindsay, R. (2010, March 29). Haiti's Excluded. Retrieved April 17, 2011 from The Nation: http://www.thenation.com/article/haitis-excluded
Deepa Panchang is the Education and Outreach Coordinator for Other Worlds. She has worked in advocacy for human rights in Haiti since the 2010 earthquake. You can access all of Other Worlds' past articles regarding post-earthquake Haiti here.

Copyleft Other Worlds. You may reprint this article in whole or in part. Please credit any text or original research you use to Deepa Panchang, Other Worlds.

Why Burma Should Remain the Country’s Name

Burma’s electoral commission told opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi to stop calling the country Burma and instead to call it Myanmar, its official name. In a statement published in The New Light of Myanmar, the electoral commission chided Aung San Suu Kyi stating, “As it is prescribed in the constitution that ‘the state shall be known as The Republic of the Union of Myanmar’, no one has the right the call the country Burma.” Aung San Suu Kyi is in her right, and should continue to do so, to express what has been worldwide condemnation of Burma’s military regime.

Disagreement on how to call the country follows Aung San Suu Kyi high-profile trip to Europe, where she continuously called the country Burma. Observers believe that authorities are trying to assert themselves after Aung San Suu Kyi, who leads the National League for Democracy (NLD) party, was widely praised during her trip.

While the electoral commission informed the NLD “to address the name of the state as prescribed in the constitution…and respect the constitution,” Nyan Win, NLD spokesman responded by stating that calling the country Burma “does not amount to disrespecting the constitution.”

There is a long history behind this disagreement. In 1989, the then ruling military junta decreed that the country should change its name from the “Union of Burma” to the “Union of Myanmar.” The move, apparently, was intended to appease minority non-Burman ethnic groups. Later the name was modified to the “Republic of the Union of Myanmar”. However, those opposing the military, including Aung San Suu Kyi, ignored the modification and continued to call the country Burma, to the evident irritation of the military.

Anthropologist Gustaaf Houtman, an expert on Burma’s politics, wrote, “There is a formal term which is Myanmar and the informal, everyday term which is Burma. Myanmar is the literary form, which is ceremonial and official and reeks of government.” Local opposition groups prefer to use the ‘old’ colloquial name, at least until Burma has a legitimate government.

Undaunted by her country’s government criticism, Aung San Suu Kyi has continued using the name Burma during her visit to Britain and Norway. Several Western countries, including Britain and the United States, continue to call the country Burma in unofficial statements of support for the democracy movement in the country.

Some people, such as Derek Tonkin, Britain’s former ambassador to Thailand and chairman of the Network Myanmar group, suggest that both Britain and the US should now call the country Myanmar, to acknowledge the country’s progress to democracy.

However, as the daughter of Aung San, considered the father of modern-day Burma and a tireless fighter for democracy and human rights in her country, nobody has greater moral authority than Aung San Suu Kyi to call the country by its former name.

There is a strong emotional and moral connotation in the name Burma. It should continue to be called that way until effective democracy returns to the country and a national referendum is conducted on how to call it. If this enrages the military, it will still be a small price to pay for the brutality that for decades they have unleashed on the country.

Dr. Cesar Chelala is a winner of an Overseas Press Club of America award.