The international humanitarian response to famine in Tigray, Ethiopia:lessons from the Nigerian Civil War, 1967-1970
- PMID: 36106597
- PMCID: PMC9481073
- DOI: 10.1080/16549716.2022.2107203
The international humanitarian response to famine in Tigray, Ethiopia:lessons from the Nigerian Civil War, 1967-1970
Abstract
The Tigray crisis in Ethiopia is a grave humanitarian catastrophe with causes and consequences that resemble the Nigerian Civil War that ended with the defeat of secessionist Biafra five decades ago. As in the Biafra example, an ethnically distinct and embattled enclave is surrounded by hostile forces and cut off from commerce of any kind, producing starvation, forced migrant encampments, and pervasive dependence on externally provided food relief. Relief action strategies developed during the Nigerian Civil War were comprised of operational components that were often insufficiently integrated into a unified system for nutritional screening, referral, acute care, nutritional rehabilitation, and team deployment. This lack of strategic integration for post-conflict relief actions merits review for possible lessons that could avert its recurrence in Tigray. If evidence-based systems for relief organization had been comprehensively applied in Biafra, the pace of post-conflict nutritional recovery could have been accelerated. Although component strategies of the Biafra-Nigeria Relief Action are being replicated by various agencies that are providing humanitarian assistance in Tigray, their collective impact could be enhanced if these strategies were integrated into a unified, evidence-driven systems response to the emergency. The elements of such a systems approach for assisting Tigray are reviewed.
Keywords: Biafra; Ethiopia; Nigerian Civil War; Nutritional emergency; Tigray.
Conflict of interest statement
The authors have no conflict of interest to declare. Due to the sensitive nature of the topic of this commentary, the communication blackout in Tigray, and recent political tensions in both Nigeria and Ethiopia, the authors of this commentary were unable to include coauthors who are resident in countries discussed in this commentary. Perspectives expressed in this commentary attempt to represent the insights of Ethiopian and Nigerian colleagues to the best of our ability.
References
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