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Published: 08 January 2007: http://news.independent.co.uk/appeals/indy_appeal/article2134841.ece
You would have to be a hard-hearted character not to be affected by the story
of Amir, the five-year-old boy who was sold into slavery by his poverty-stricken
parents in Pakistan and taken to Dubai by wealthy Arabs from the Gulf states.
There, within a matter of months, he fell from the back of a camel in a race and
was trampled so badly he cannot speak any more and is blind in one eye. At the
age of six, Amir's life is ruined before it has properly begun.
Amir's case
was one of those which was brought to our attention during this year's
Independent Christmas Appeal by Anti-Slavery International, one of the three
charities the appeal has supported this year. It was a heart-breaking story,
even with the knowledge that Anti-Slavery has led a successful campaign to
change the law so that the practice has now been outlawed in Dubai.
But
Amir's tale of personal tragedy is the kind of story we are used to reading in
the pages of a daily newspaper. The British media is at ease with the personal,
the dramatic, the unusual and the emotional.
What we are less good at is
writing about persisting situations which are characterised by no single
dramatic event - the stuff of normality which is what most shapes people's daily
lives - and yet which may have just as doleful an impact on the way they live.
The Christmas Appeal offers us an opportunity to tackle such subjects.
Take
Liberia, the poor African country only recently emerged from civil war. There
are plenty of stories of individual trauma and tragedy there - in a society
where rebel boy soldiers, high on hallucinogenic drugs, wore women's clothes and
wigs as fetishist protection against bullets; replete with reports of
cannibalism with victims caught at checkpoints murdered on the spot, their
hearts ripped out and fried in palm oil.
Yet that is not the real story. Nor
even is the emergency care provided by another of our three charities, the
British medical agency Merlin, which flies doctors to emergency situations
around the world. The real story - if you measure reality by what has the
biggest single impact upon the lives of ordinary people - is, aside from dire
poverty, the total collapse of the country's health system.
Devastated by 14
years of war and looting - on top of its baseline of poverty of a kind which
most of us cannot properly comprehend - Liberia has some of the worst health
statistics in the world. The average adult dies before they are 42 and a quarter
of all children do not even reach the age of five. The three million population
share just 30 doctors.
"Helping here is not just a case of zooming doctors in
and out," says Carolyn Miller, Merlin's chief executive. "Working in fragile
states you are dealing with the collapse of entire systems that we take for
granted."
Though it began by looking after war casualties, Merlin today, with
an expatriate staff of 25 and a payroll of about 800, runs almost half of
Liberia's feeble healthcare system - in which around 90 per cent of the staff
have no salary because the government is too broke to pay them. Merlin pays them
each an "incentive" of $150 (£78) a month.
"You have to get behind what
normally grabs the headlines," says Ms Miller. "In somewhere like Liberia
there's no point in just going in and fixing what's been broken. It's the whole
system that's broken down. And it'll take 10 years to fix it."
Some things
take even longer. This year is the 200th anniversary of the abolition in Britain
of the slave trade. Yet slavery persists. Anti-Slavery International estimates
that between 12 and 27 million people are still slaves.
Some are born into
it, as in the slave tribes of west Africa. But most are trapped into it through
bonded labour where employers make loans at such exorbitant rates of interest
that they can never be repaid. In India and Pakistan debts are passed down from
one generation to the next. Others, like many child domestic workers, are
virtual slaves, with no control over their own lives or movements, working for
just food and lodging. Perhaps most alarmingly, we have learnt through the
appeal over the past weeks, slavery exists once more in the UK. Many foreign
domestic servants are held, even in the wealthy suburbs of Britain, in a
servitude from which they find it almost impossible to escape. People
traffickers have set up "bonded labour" debt traps for many of the east
Europeans now working in this country - in chicken packing factories, as casual
labourers in our docks and farms, as cleaners and kitchen staff in our best
hotels and restaurants.
"The Independent's appeal has revealed the issue of
modern slavery in all its complexities," says Anti-Slavery's director, Aidan
McQuade, "and to show that it's a global issue which impacts on the UK. The
abolition of slavery is unfinished business."
Yet we have learnt that
democratic countries can change things. Aid can impact on slavery in many ways;
improved primary education would give more children an alternative to domestic
work; and aid programmes can be designed with greater awareness of the power
relationships within poor communities. Britain could take the lead by developing
the methodology to do this.
Diplomatic pressure can be exerted on countries
like India and Pakistan - as a condition of aid and debt relief - to persuade
them to enforce the anti-bonded labour laws they have passed but which are
widely ignored among the brick kilns of Madras and elsewhere.
But domestic
policy needs to change to better combat people-trafficking. At present police
attempts to prosecute traffickers are constrained by measures designed to
appease anti-immigration populism - and Labour is planning to change the law to
make it more difficult for foreign domestic servants to escape the clutches of
exploitative employers. What is needed instead, we have learnt, is greater
protection for trafficked people so they will give evidence to enable the police
to prosecute. And the Government must sign the European Convention on Action
Against Trafficking in Human Beings.
Politics is an area most charities
constitutionally have to eschew. But this year our Christmas Appeal consciously
entered the political arena internationally with two charities who work with
Palestinians in the Occupied Territories. We did so because this newspaper has
long felt that the ordinary people of Gaza and the West Bank are wilfully
forgotten by many parties to the Middle East conflict.
Not everyone
appreciates such correctives. "Often," says Caroline Qutteneh, the
director of the Welfare Association, "when an appeal is launched asking
for help for Palestinians in an emergency situation, we receive negative and
sometimes insulting responses from those wanting to undermine this work".
Our
appeal has had its critics. Supporters of Israel have objected that it is
partial, taking objection to articles like the one which compared the experience
of women giving birth in Bethlehem today with that of the Mother of Jesus two
millennia ago. It was wrong, they said, to describe her as a Palestinian
refugee, since Palestine did not exist as a political entity until 100 years
after Christ's birth. But such journalistic devices make a wider point about the
way that ordinary innocents become entrapped in political conflict; ignoring
their needs is not a moral option. "The appeal," says the Welfare Association's
director, "has dramatically increased coverage of important issues affecting the
daily lives of Palestinians that are not mentioned in the usual media
reporting".
We have highlighted injustices such as how patients from the West
Bank needing urgent medical treatment are denied access to the main Palestinian
hospitals in East Jerusalem, how farmers are prevented from working by the
Israeli separation wall across their land, and how agricultural produce is left
to rot unable to pass through any checkpoints.
But much of our reporting has
been about unglamorous work - beefing up training for hospital managers or
improving error prevention and equipment accuracy in Palestinian hospitals. But
all of it helps save the lives of the innocent.
The appeal has allowed such
stories to be told as we explained how our three charities work with local
people and their organisations to bring some positive changes to the daily lives
of ordinary people. "In that alone," says Ms Qutteneh, "there is no doubt that
this appeal has made a real difference".
£212,000 and counting ...
* The total raised so far by this year's Christmas Appeal is
£212,663.
* This is the final article in the Appeal but it is not too late to
make a contribution to our three charities - Merlin, the Welfare Association and
Anti-Slavery International who are doing such extraordinary work in some
forgotten places.
* Our donation collection system will remain open for
another couple of weeks. For details of how to give see the coupon on this
page.
Anti-Slavery International
was founded in 1839 and is the
world's oldest international human rights organisation and the only charity in
the UK to work exclusively against slavery and related abuses. It works at
local, national and international levels to eliminate the system of slavery
around the world by lobbying governments and working with local organisations to
raise public awareness of it. The organisation also supports research to assess
the scale of slavery to identify measures to end it. Among its concerns are
slavery by descent, child domestic workers and forced labour.
www.antislavery.org
Merlin
is a medical aid charity set up in an office
in the spare bedroom of a London house, from which it organised its first
mission: a convoy bound for war-torn Bosnia carrying £1m of food and medicines.
Since then the organisation has grown significantly and its work has expanded to
cover all aspects of medical aid, from emergency relief to long-term building in
fragile states. It has worked in 37 countries including: Liberia (pictured),
where it has rebuilt hospitals destroyed by the 14-year-old civil war; Kenya,
where it is treating thousands of malnourished children in drought-affected
areas; and on the front line in Darfur.
www.merlin.org.uk
The Welfare Association
is a small British charity
which supports vital emergency and development projects in the West Bank, Gaza
and in Palestinian refugee camps in Lebanon. Its work includes emergency medical
care, disability rehabilitation, IT training and pre-school education. It
replants community orchards and olive groves and supports farmers who have lost
land and had crops destroyed because of the erection of the Israeli security
barrier. It has improved six Palestinian hospitals and rebuilt electricity
supplies in Jabalia, the biggest and most congested of the UN refugee camps in
Gaza.
www.welfareassociation.org.uk
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