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The next time you are in the local park watching children play, watch their smiles, their energy, their zest for life. Drink it in as many of us who have children do, as a joy of life. Then count down the line, and mentally disappear 1 out of every 5 of them. Those children that went "poof" in your mind are a metaphorical representation of the dead and dying children in Niger at this time. In today's New York Times, a desperately sad assessment of the hunger crisis currently ravaging Niger, reported to be the second poorest nation on earth: Niger's Anguish is Reflected in
its Dying Children The situation is grim. If you believe the press, then 3.6 million folks, nearly 1 million of them children, will die in the next year if something is not done, soon. I was enraged to read that the government of Niger decided to use a "free market stabilization" approach to solve the problem, choosing to reject a free food approach and deciding instead to play market maker. According to this article, it decided to sell its own surplus grain in an effort to drive down the price of millet by flooding the market. According to the article, this resulted in a market backlash, the price of millet skyrocketed, and families were forced into the choice of selling what little they possessed to pay for food or starving. You gotta love trickle down economic theory. The part that that truly caused me to gasp in horror (although not surpised horror; I am never surprised anymore) was this: Among others, the United Nations World Food Program and Doctors Without Borders sounded alarms, and Niger's government, with World Food Program approval, quickly asked donors to give Niger 71,000 tons of food aid and $3 million for the 400,000 most vulnerable farmers and herders. I subscribe to a theory, not well developed, that people have a better grasp of dollar figures exceeding $1,000,000 when you break it down for them in terms of things they can see every day. Let's test theory in this context. Setting aside the pounds of food, the missing $2.7 million dollars could have been sent to Niger to feed 400,000 of the worst off farmers/herders if: 1.35% of the 100 million households in the United States had bought one less loaf of bread in the past eight months since Doctors without Borders and others began their cry for humanitarian aid. (Bread averages $2/loaf in the US - unless you're where I live then it's ugly). If we're talking only about married/partner households, that contribution would skyrocket - it would take 2.2% of all households to have done it, since there are only 58 million of those. On the other hand, if just 1/10 of the 25,000,000 Americans who visit Starbucks each week for their fix (myself included) had just skipped a cup of their least expensive beverage (tea, at $1.30 if I recall what my sister paid yesterday), there would have been enough. Since it is totally unfair to expect the US to shoulder the burden of helping the ancestral homeland of all those slaves it profited from for 400 years, the world as a whole (other than Luxembourg, it has clearly stepped up) should share in the responsibility. That shouldn't be too difficult, right? It seems that if each of the world's estimated 2.1 billion Christians had sent in a penny, we'd have been OK. (If only stated adherents to Islam had been stuck with the entire bill, they'd have had to dig deep and pay two cents). Had each nation on earth with a lottery system salted away 2/1000th of a cent of their 1998 revenue from lottery sales (126 billion), the bill would have been covered without anyone breaking a sweat. On the other hand, Robert Johnson -- former head of Johnson Publishing, Black darling of the right-wing business establishment and beloved (not) to us progressive Black folks as the reason we are stuck with that booty shaking, rump breaking embarassment to a people known as Black Entertainment Television today as our sole television voice -- could have just written a fucking check. It wouldn't even have hurt much. After all, it would have been only 1% of the price Johnson sold BET to Viacom for in 2000 ($3 billion). And just 2% % of the rumored size of his personal holdings (less than the savings his family will receive from the permanent repeal of the estate tax when that "I got mine get yours" self-hating idiot finally keels over. Fuck him. I'm going to put him on my "you should be ashamed of yourself you greedy SOB" political letter writing list. Just as soon as I write what will be the 10th check I can't really afford this year (it's been a bad financial year, as is often the case for lawyers who don't have mega corporation clients who always pay their bills on time) to Doctors without Borders. /sigh In my most cynical moments, I sometimes put on my tin foil hat and speculate that the reason most of the leadership of the Free World does so little about Africa's suffering -- a suffering in which the West played no small part in creating -- is that it is far cheaper to take back the West's former colonies letting everybody in them die than to negotiate fairly for access to what is indisputably the vast untapped wealth of that continent. I know that at G8, Tony Blair tried to make Africa a priority -- for privitization, free market solutions and the like. Conditionaby l aid to human suffering -- the condition being that Africa needs to become hospitable to "investment." Right. Investment is clearly the way to save a child hours from death from starvation. Everybody knows this. I'm going to stop now because I'm too depressed to write any more. Next article: Central Asia: Region Returns To Muslim Roots (Part 1) Previous article: How Marcel Marceau Saved the World |
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Let me see if I understand your point. The hunger crisis in Niger is due to the stinginess of bread buyers, Starbucks customers, the US Government, Christians in general, Muslims in general, lottery systems everywhere and Robert Johnson, former owner of the Black Entertainment Network? Or are all these things just evil vestiges of a world-wide free market?
You might as well blame Greenpeace, and other western environmental groups, for helping to bring about the demise of the nuclear power industry. Prior to 1980, Niger exported great quantities of its most abundant natural resource, uranium, for processing in the west into nuclear fuel. The income from this allowed the government of Niger to provide food handouts to many of its citizens, after government officials had taken their percentage of graft from the income, of course. But after the cleanest, most reliable source of energy was successfully demonized by the progressive left, that market declined and the Niger economy quickly began to collapse.
Just another example of good intentions leading to unintended circumstances on the part of the progressive left, I’m sure. But as long as we’re busy handing out blame for the problems in Niger to booty shakers, we might as well give the anti-nuclear power environmentalists their fair share, too.
The problem of food shortage in Niger can be laid squarely at the feet of a disinterested United Nations. The UN World Food Program receives more than $2 Billion every year. James Morris, executive director of the program and the person responsible for helping to insure this money gets to where it is needed said concerning the crisis in Niger; “It went virtually unnoticed for a good many months” adding that last winter and spring, world attention was focused on the humanitarian crisis caused by the tsunami in South Asia. “People do get preoccupied by the high-profile emergencies.”
The man that oversees a program that receives more than $2 Billion in donations per year for just these kinds of emergencies was unable to scrounge up a measly $3 Million for Niger until the BBC publicized the emergency. Only after the BBC reports from Niger in July of 2005 generated an international public outcry did the UN World Food Program initiate a massive distribution of free food. “It’s crazy,” said Sekkenes, of Doctors Without Borders. “It’s the famous CNN effect, but this time it was the BBC effect.” As the spotlight turned to Niger, UN World Food Program officials dug deeply into their emergency fund, directing $19.4 million to the country by August of 2005.
Wear that tin hat if you must. And those checks to Doctors without Borders do make a difference. But you should direct at least some of your criticism to the leadership at the United Nations.