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COMMENT | What will Covid-19 do to victims of war?

This article is 5 years old

COMMENT | If the first casualty in war is truth, as the saying goes, the second may very well be something the entire world values highly right now: quality health care.

Families fleeing conflict or currently in its crosshairs know that medical assistance is a rare and precious privilege in war zones. Amid the terror of bombs and bullets, a functioning medical facility is a life-saving oasis, but it’s a near certainty medical staff will be overworked and short on supplies.

This lack of medical care is what makes Covid-19’s inexorable march into conflict zones so terrifying: it’s a dramatic threat to life in places where people are often seen as nameless, faceless others. But my organisation helps and gets to know real people, real families who now lie before a violent storm.

As president of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), I’ve come to know the very hard scenes that war victims must confront. We feed the severely malnourished. We listen to survivors of sexual assault. We patch together splintered families, and we sew up grotesque war wounds.

In short, we see the world at its worst, which is why I want world leaders and governments to listen carefully: I am scared.

I am scared because Covid-19 is overwhelming the medical capacities of Western nations’ advanced medical infrastructure.

I am scared for when Covid-19 reaches the world’s under-resourced prisons, where already fragile health and low medical capacity will combine for widespread sickness.

I am scared for when Covid-19 reaches the world’s cramped refugee camps and precarious provisional shelters, where social distancing is impossible and medical resources scant.

The children, parents, and especially grandparents found there will soon be left to fend for themselves against Covid-19, and that is why I’m urging governments and humanitarian groups like mine to do as much as they can to help these most vulnerable people.

This has been a necessity for a long time. Today, helping those least able to defend themselves from disease is a moral and political imperative even – or especially – during the crippling societal and economic effects of a global health crisis. We can and must reduce the suffering this disease will cause those least able to cope.

The Rand Corporation found in a 2016 study that Afghanistan, Haiti, Yemen and 22 countries in Africa make up the 25 most-vulnerable countries to infectious disease outbreaks. The majority of the 10 most vulnerable countries were conflict zones.

The ICRC is currently carrying out a major reorientation in our assistance activities, adapting our existing work to today’s viral reality. In the medical facilities we support such as in Syria, Somalia and Iraq, we are increasing stocks of essential supplies and reinforcing infection prevention and control measures.

In detention facilities in more than 50 countries, the ICRC works with the authorities to strengthen medical screenings of and prevention measures for new arrivals, visitors, guards and delivery personnel. We also support disinfection measures and distribute hygiene materials. We have seen such measures prevent the spread of cholera and Ebola into places of detention in Guinea, Liberia and the Democratic Republic of Congo. We must do the same with Covid-19.

These are critical steps right now. But here’s another critical step: The ICRC and others must continue to carry out non-Covid-19 work. For example, the hospitals we support in South Sudan have received more than 145 patients with gunshot wounds in recent weeks. They must be helped, too.

The sad reality is that for people in conflict, Covid-19 may just be one additional mortal threat. It’s for a good reason the UN secretary-general has called for a global ceasefire; humanitarian actors need all possible space to respond to the present pandemic.

Our double response to conflict and Covid-19 is extra difficult because of the vital measures taken to contain the pandemic. Travel restrictions prevent the collection of humanitarian assistance and block our teams from entering countries or delivering supplies. We’ll work to overcome these challenges, but we ask decision-makers to make exceptions for health and humanitarian work.

If helping is a moral imperative, governments and other armed actors in conflict theatres must protect a neutral and impartial humanitarian space, not overburden it with regulations and restrictions; everyone must protect human dignity, not marginalise, exclude and stigmatise.

I’m scared that Covid-19’s assault on the world’s most vulnerable will be vicious. Time is already short, but we must work together now to reduce whatever upcoming suffering that we can. Governments, belligerents and authorities must change their behaviour. 

Viruses know no borders; the impact from a lack of response and resources for detainees and refugees may haunt the entire world.


PETER MAURER is president of the International Committee of the Red Cross.

The views expressed here are those of the author/contributor and do not necessarily represent the views of Malaysiakini.