Humanitarian chisel effect, risk or reality!

An Editorial by Alain Boinet.

The chisel effect is an economic phenomenon in which the amount of resources and the amount of costs evolve in opposite ways. Regarding humanitarian aid, after a continuous growth of humanitarian budgets, does not the increase of the needs facing a decrease of the means illustrate a dangerous humanitarian chisel effect. Is it a simple pause or the beginning of a ebb? This is an essential question for humanitarians.

It was a ebb that occurred in 2023, according to OCHA, when faced with growing humanitarian needs, we experienced declining funding. Indeed, to help 245 million people, we needed 56.7 billion USD. But only USD 19.9 billion has been mobilized, or 35% of the needs, where the usual average was 51 to 64% for 10 years (2013-2022)!

Percentage of funding to needs, UN calls from 2013 to 2023. © Global Humanitarian assistance report 2023

The immediate consequence is that we were able to rescue only 128 million people out of the 245 million planned in 2023! What happened to the other 117 million human beings left behind because of lack of resources? Would the chisel effect have closed in on them.

At the 3rd European Humanitarian Forum, on 18 and 19 March 2024 in Brussels, Janez Lenarcic, European Commissioner for Humanitarian Affairs with ECHO, said: «Make no mistake, the humanitarian lifeboat is sinking»! The message is clear and must be taken seriously on the eve of the June European elections in the Member States with this autumn a new presidency, a new college of commissioners, a new budget for the next 5 years. The stakes are high as some institutional humanitarian budgets decline.

What will happen in 2024 to OCHA’s appeal to rescue 180 million people with an expected budget of USD 46.4 billion? 180 million people at risk in 2024 compared to 230 million in 2023 following a new methodology for needs analysis. In the face of dwindling resources, the number of people to be rescued has been reduced thanks to JIAF 2.0, which “sets global standards for estimating and analyzing humanitarian needs and protection risks.” The coincidence with the chisel effect is unfortunate. It will be necessary to question this new methodology to the definition of which United Nations agencies and NGOs have contributed in particular.

This methodology may have the merit of greater precision and division of responsibilities between the major players in international aid. But we must also ask ourselves what has become of the people “out of the ordinary” excluded from humanitarian aid. Have development agencies supported them? Or, on the contrary, have these vulnerable people remained alone on the verge of solidarity?

In this context, the key word that currently mobilizes the humanitarian ecosystem is the prioritization of aid. Prioritization is a selection and it cannot fail to make us think about the sorting of wounded in war surgery when we can not save everyone and must choose!

So, precisely, what will be the vital humanitarian needs for the populations victims of wars, disasters and epidemics in the coming years?

When the butterfly effect comes to challenge the scissors effect.

We asked ourselves this question in these columns in March. Could the butterfly effect of conflicts lead to a «domino effect» the «20 years of chaos» that some fear?

The reason I highlight the geopolitical causes of humanitarian consequences is that I have experienced them during more than four decades of humanitarian aid around the world. There are of course also the growing causes related to climate and major epidemics that we will come back to. But we know that the vast majority of humanitarian needs result from conflicts in all their forms and that these seem to be entering a historical phase of expansion.

We remember that Raymond Aron declared the time of the cold war «Impossible peace, improbable war». Perhaps it is necessary to say today with regard to international tensions «Improbable peace, possible war»!

Military parade on the Red Square in Moscow, Russia in 2013. © VLADJ55

Speaking to the European press on 29 March, Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk said, “We must get used to the fact that a new era has begun: the pre-war era. I’m not exaggerating.” “If Ukraine loses, no one in Europe will feel safe.” «War is no longer a concept of the past in Europe, now entered the era of the pre-war». “The most worrying thing right now is that absolutely all scenarios are possible.”

If, at the beginning of the Russian military offensive in Ukraine, we could ask ourselves the question of the responsibilities on the various causes of this war, two years later, faced with a high intensity war that will last, faced with the risk of a defeat of Ukraine, the question arises otherwise. What consequences would a defeat of Ukraine entail while Vladimir Putin plays his game and opposes us another political model, like his Chinese ally. Have we not, without yet knowing it, entered into the beginning of a more general war which will sooner or later necessarily lead us to war economy with what consequences on needs as on humanitarian means?

The tone is also rising in Asia with the edition of the standard map of China in the daily Global Times, quasi-official organ of the Chinese Communist Party. This map now includes the Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh, southern part of Tibet, and Aksai Chin. Similarly, the famous 10-row line around the South China Sea threatens all neighboring states: Vietnam, Philippines, Malaysia and Taiwan. A map is an object of power and projection on the world. Can we believe that this will never go further and what would be the consequences of the alliance game in the event of a Chinese coup?

The 2023 edition of the standard map of China. © Twitter @globaltimesnews

Closer to home, the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) has been facing the rebellion of the March 23 Movement (M23) supported by Rwanda for two years according to several UN reports. In an interview given on Friday, March 29 to several media, the president of the DRC, Félix Tschisekedi, was questioned on the risk of a «declaration of war in Rwanda», alerting that the mission of Joao Lourenço, President of Angola and mediator appointed by the African Union, represented «the way of the last chance»!

What can humanitarians do?

Filippo Grandi, High Commissioner for Refugees of the United Nations launched «It is a indictment against the state of the world» when the figure of 110 million refugees and displaced was reached on June 14, 2023. To measure this figure, remember that they were 43.3 million in 2010, 60 million in 2015, 79.5 million in 2019! There is no reason for this figure to stop climbing, quite the contrary!

The risk is real to see the chisel effect of increasing humanitarian needs crossing the decrease in resources.

This is not already the case for the 17 million people in Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger who need humanitarian assistance this year. In 2023, humanitarian appeals received only about a third of the necessary funds.

Despite the commitments made at the European Humanitarian Forum, on 18 and 19 March, in Brussels, despite the hope of seeing the European Union and the Member States confirm their commitment to humanitarian action, faced with the demobilization of other major actors, far from any wait-and-see, It is essential that humanitarian organizations mobilize to recall the responsibility to protect and the duty to provide humanitarian assistance.

Food distribution in Goma, Democratic Republic of Congo. © Photo PAM / Michael Castofas
Déplacement de population en RDC entre les villes de Goma et de Rutshuru. © Photo Moses Sawasawa / MSF

Ways and means are not lacking, not only to sanctuarize humanitarian budgets, but also to index their evolution on the level of the vital needs of populations in danger. These initiatives include:

  • Act with States and European and international organizations to raise awareness of the disastrous consequences that a possible chisel effect would have.
  • Mobilize public opinion to support this great humanitarian cause and to develop the generosity of individuals.
  • Accelerate all forms of innovation that reduce costs and increase aid effectiveness.
  • Optimize the double Humanitarian Nexus – development and encourage development agencies to support the most vulnerable in fragile or crisis countries.

Humanitarian aid is undoubtedly at a new historic turning point and it must once again ensure and demonstrate its ability to carry out its mission to save lives.

The humanitarian must say loud and clear that reducing humanitarian budgets is not to make virtuous savings, but on the contrary to multiply the risks of mortality, despair, radicalisation, of migratory movements which in turn will cause harmful effects from step to step like an epidemic. Without forgetting the essential, without solidarity, what will we be and what will happen?

 

Alain Boinet who thanks you for your support (MakeaDonation).

Alain Boinet is the president of Défis Humanitaires, an association that publishes the online journal http://www.defishumanitaires.com. He is the founder of the humanitarian association Solidarités International, of which he was Managing Director for 35 years. In addition, he is a member of the Humanitarian Concertation Group at the Crisis and Support Centre of the Ministry of Europe and Foreign Affairs, member of the Board of Directors of Solidarités International, the French Water Partnership (PFE), Fondation Véolia, Think Tank (re)sources. He continues to visit the field (North-East Syria, Nagorno-Karabakh/Artsakh and Armenia) and to testify in the media.

 

In this edition, you will find the following articles:

The Butterfly Effect, from war to humanitarian aid!

© UNRWA Ashraf Amra

“Can the flap of a butterfly’s wings in Brazil cause a tornado in Texas? This statement by meteorologist Edward Lorenz is the origin of the Butterfly Effect theory. Can this theory now be applied to geopolitics, and with what consequences for humanitarian aid?

At the end of the International Conference in Support of Ukraine, which brought together 21 heads of state and government at the Elysée Palace on February 26, French President Emmanuel Macron declared that “nothing must be excluded”, and raised the possibility of Western troops being deployed in Ukraine itself.

Is it triggered by a balance of power that is becoming dangerously unfavorable to the Ukrainians, linked to Trump’s provocative statements about the weakness of the European war effort?

When Vladimir Putin replied in his annual address to the Russian nation, “This constitutes a real threat of conflict with the use of nuclear weapons, which means the destruction of civilization”, is this another Butterfly Effect, and how far could it lead when we know that this Butterfly Effect is also known as chaos theory?

Let’s meditate on the famous phrase by Carl Von Clausewitz, Prussian general, philosopher and military historian, in his book “The Art of War”, when he writes that war is the pursuit of politics by other means. And we are at war today on the European continent, where numerous humanitarian organizations are active in Ukraine to help the victims. Having failed to preserve peace on the continent, are we doomed to see this war last, intensify, expand to other territories, or even escalate to the use of unconventional weapons?

Some figures speak volumes.

France’s defense budget rose from 32.3 billion euros in 2017 to 47 billion euros in 2024, and is expected to reach around 70 billion euros in 2030! The general trend is similar worldwide. According to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), 2022 represents the eighth consecutive year of growth for defense worldwide, estimated at $2,340 billion. Spending in Europe (480 billion euros in 2022) has exceeded its level at the end of the Cold War.

“If you want peace, prepare for war” goes the ancient adage, and that’s exactly what could happen now, as Europe and the United States switch to a war economy and fail to keep Ukraine supplied with shells. Russia produces 2 to 2.5 million shells a year, while the Western commitment to supply one million shells was limited to 300,000 in 9 months out of a one-year commitment.

Experts are now talking about the risk of a tipping point in the war in Ukraine, with a possible final victory for Russia. Faced with this risk, and anxious about the American elections at the end of the year, the countries of Europe are essentially in agreement: “We will do everything we can to ensure that Russia cannot win this war”.

It’s a long road to the causes and consequences that will impact on humanitarian aid and those involved. The geopolitical Butterfly Effect has now spread to the entire planet. The international order that has prevailed since the demise of the USSR is over, and we have entered a phase of fragmentation that has French general Michel Yakolveff saying, “We’re in for 20 years of chaos”.

Against this backdrop, let’s ask ourselves the following question. Is there a link between the war in Ukraine and Azerbaijan’s military offensive against Nagorno-Karabakh or Artsakh, now threatening Armenia and leading countries like India and France to supply arms to this country?

Armenian soldiers in front of the 50 tanks delivered by France to Armenia for defense.

Is there an imitation effect between the tug-of-war between the Alliance of Sahel States (Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger) and the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), and the renewed war in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) between the army and the M23 rebel movement, militarily supported by Rwanda, and a coalition comprising Angola, South Africa and Burundi?

Is it necessary to mention the situation in Gaza to understand, as in Ukraine, that this is also a regional war with a global dimension, which plunges us into the uncertainty of its serious long-term consequences. In any case, let’s be clear here: humanitarian aid to the people of Gaza is an immediate survival emergency, and an absolute moral obligation.

Against a backdrop of deregulation of international relations, weakening of the UN and questioning of Western magisterial authority, this is an opportune moment for countries and actors who would like to take advantage of the situation to seize territories by force.

In an article, journalists Stéphane Aubouard and Alain Léauthier in Marianne calculated that if we added up the populations of countries at war with a state, those in civil war, in hybrid war or in civil war, this would represent 48% of the world’s population. These conflicts are just as likely to worsen as to spread, at a time and in an environment favorable to any challenge to the established order.

What’s the Butterfly Effect for humanitarian aid?

Will humanitarian needs increase, stabilize or decrease? This is the question we need to ask ourselves in order to prepare for the most likely scenario. Fragmentation is a source of conflict, as we can see from the tensions in Moldavia with Transnistria and in the Balkans.

While the consequences of conflict currently account for the lion’s share of humanitarian aid, let’s not forget that climate disruption and its catastrophes, water stress, hunger and the gradual depletion of natural resources against a backdrop of demographic growth and exponentially increasing consumption will amplify and accelerate the need for humanitarian responses.

What will be the trend over the coming years in terms of people’s access to relief? Improvement, stabilization or regression? Do the examples of Gaza, the blockade of Nagorno-Karabakh, Ukraine and the war-torn territories of the Sahel countries illustrate the trend?

Will funding be sufficient to meet the vital needs of populations affected by war, disaster or epidemics? According to OCHA and Martin Griffiths, the alarm bells were ringing in 2023, with the worst funding shortfall on record, when only 19.9 billion USD of the 56.7 billion USD estimated at the end of the year had been raised! What will happen in 2024 and beyond?

France, which had increased its Official Development Assistance (ODA) from less than 10 billion euros in 2017 to more than 15 billion in 2022, has just cut its 2024 ODA by 746 million euros as part of a 10 billion euro plan to reduce public spending, for lack of sufficient growth! How can we compensate for this loss, how can we make up for it in 2025?

The big question, then, is whether the new international context of conflict and the arms race, of a transition to a war economy that would cause constraints and shortages in certain sectors, will see ODA and humanitarian aid sanctuarized at the level of needs or, on the contrary, reduced.

Not to mention the risk of humanitarian aid being politicized, both by certain states and by various organizations. The recent publication of an article entitled “La folle dérive des ONG” (“The mad drift of NGOs”) in the magazine Franc-tireur, calling into question the impartiality of human rights NGOs, should give us food for thought about how to maintain public and donor confidence, and strengthen access to populations at risk.

For a humanitarian aggiornamento.

© UNWRA. Supply trucks for Gaza waiting to enter.

Humanitarians today are faced with a host of challenges, some of which depend on them, others on which they have little or no control. The humanitarian sector needs to reconsider its human, financial and logistical capacities, as well as its capacity for innovation, public support and influence.

Influence is more than ever essential if humanitarian concerns are to be kept alive, broadened and deepened in public policy. Whether we’re talking about ODA, humanitarian funding, access to water, food, shelter and healthcare, or all the interacting factors such as climate, water, natural resources and the environment, all of which I can’t mention here.

Don’t get me wrong, I believe in influencing humanitarian public policy, not in some partisan ideology using humanitarianism to weaken our influence and ultimately our action. Others can do it, but mixing genres is contrary to the humanitarian principles of neutrality, impartiality and independence, which are the main conditions for humanitarian access, often abused, sometimes blocked, but always essential.

In this editorial, despite the description of a rather gloomy geopolitical landscape, my aim is to be realistic. While the worst is fortunately never certain, to prevent it we must act accordingly, and today’s world also harbors many signs of hope, including the precious optimism of the will to avoid chaos and preserve humanism.

This article is an illustration of the editorial policy of the online magazine Défis Humanitaires. Analyze, anticipate, propose and debate for a more intelligent and effective humanitarianism. Debate, as we are doing here once again on the dramatic situation in Gaza, and as we will continue to do for the future of humanitarianism.

 

Alain Boinet

Alain Boinet is President of the association Défis Humanitaires, which publishes the online magazine http://www.defishumanitaires.com. He is the founder of the humanitarian association Solidarités International, of which he was Managing Director for 35 years. He is also a member of the Groupe de Concertation Humanitaire at the Centre de Crise et de Soutien of the French Ministry of Europe and Foreign Affairs, and of the Board of Directors of Solidarités International, the Partenariat Français pour l’Eau (PFE), the Véolia Foundation and the Think Tank (re)sources. He continues to travel to the field (North-East Syria, Nagorno-Karabakh/Artsakh and Armenia) and to speak to the media.

 

We are pleased to offer you articles and interviews on Gaza, Armenia and Kurdistan, as well as articles on water to mark World Water Day on March 22. Thank you for your support (MakeaDonation). Issue 86 :