8.19.2009
change in which i don't believe
Details of the plans for U.S. foreign aid announced last week in Goma during Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's visit are slowly beginning to emerge. Of the $17 million the secretary announced, about $3 million is to go towards training police on responding to gender-based violence. As I noted last week, that's not much, and the police need training on a whole host of issues, but $3 million is better than nothing. USAID will learn the hard way that they're going to have to start way on basic professionalization (and salary payment) before most of the Congolese police force will be able to do anything about tracking down and arresting rapists.
What of the rest of the money? Part of it will go to Camcorders for Congo, of course, and the State Department has been fairly quiet on this as far as I can tell, but activist Desiree Zwanck, who works at Heal Africa hospital in Goma, gives us some details in her post on the secretary's visit (emphasis mine):
"Much needed and appreciated funds - but wait a minute. HEAL Africa, the local organization that was hosting the event, has a hospital with 7 years of experience in treating survivors of sexual violence. However, we learned only through the speech of our honored visitor that USAID is planning to construct a hospital to do the same work, in the same city. And even though Clinton claimed that funds would be distributed to local NGOs, we found out shortly afterwards that the lion’s share would go to the International Rescue Committee.
"I don’t believe Clinton had been well-informed on the dynamics of aid in Eastern DRC, though it is certainly no secret that aid is a cut-throat business. Competition for funding, attention and prestige is huge. As a result, cooperation between GOs and NGOs is lacking or poorly coordinated. Communication needs to be improved, and new initiatives need to be matched with what is already being done. What we saw happen yesterday was the opposite."
As Zwanck notes, what USAID is planning to do in Goma is almost incomprehensible. Let me get this straight:
They looked at the city - which is home to a hospital that is a model of community engagement - and decided that it would be better to build a different hospital altogether?
That was apparently decided on without consulting those who are already experts on treating rape victims in the region?
And that will lack the extensive network of community-based counselors who live in the villages and are trained to identify and assist rape victims?
And the Secretary of State told a roomfull of Congolese activists that the money would go to local organizations when in fact it's mostly going to an American NGO that bases most of its work in the eastern Congo out of Bukavu?
What?!?
Some of you are ready to jump on me about "well, aren't there more victims than existing hospitals can treat?" and similar questions. Yes. It's true. More facilities to treat rape victims are desperately needed. That's why Heal Africa is fund raising for a new hospital building, and why Panzi's facilities continue to expand in Bukavu.
But it doesn't make sense to reinvent the wheel in the eastern Congo. Did USAID bother to talk to any Congolese people while developing this plan? Drs. Mukwege and Lusi and their staffs already know how to treat victims of sexual violence. They have developed hospitals and programs that are models of how to address gender-based violence in impossibly difficult situations with limited resources. They don't just treat case after case after case; Heal Africa trains medical residents to go out into the field and run clinics and hospitals on their own, and both hospitals do all they can to give women and girls who survive these attacks a chance at having a life, an income, and some hope after they leave. It makes a lot more sense to partner with the people who already do these things - and who have integrated the communities they serve into their approach - than it does to start from scratch.
There's also the issue that the International Rescue Committee is poorly perceived by a large segment of the Congolese population. That's not to discount their work - they do a lot of good & support both Panzi and Heal Africa's work - but issues relating to the 1994 genocide (There's a view common among many Congolese that the American government supported the Rwandan government after the genocide (a government that, it must be remembered, has caused a lot of suffering in the Kivus), so therefore the American IRC which gets money from the U.S. government is an ally of/spy for Rwanda.) mean that they have a huge perception problem. It's an issue. (Dennis Dijkzeul has done some very interesting research in South Kivu in this regard.) It's really unclear what the IRC money will be used for, but if most of it is going to them, presumably they will have a significant role in the hospital's construction. If this new hospital is to specifically be an "IRC hospital," I'm not sure that's such a good idea.
I am sorely disappointed in my government's failure to truly take local concerns into account, and even more disappointed that it's the Obama administration that failed to do so. This plan looks for all the world like something that was conceived in Washington, not the Kivus. It represents some of the worst habits of Africa-related policy making in American foreign aid and could not be further from representing real change. Like Zwanck, I'm forced to conclude that the secretary's visit to Goma was not the beginning of the end of the war, but rather a sign that the same old, same old will prevail in American policy towards Africa.
posted by texasinafrica at 8/19/2009
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Thursday, August 20, 2009
Clinton and Congo
Below is an email I received this morning that is from a Blog who's source I unfortunately do not know. However I completely agree with the sentiments presented. I really hope that Mrs. Clinton and the Obama administration will think very hard about what it means to be in partnership with other countries, supporting the local organizations, versus the historical US policy of bringing in our own ideals.
Friday, July 10, 2009
Back to Goma
I'm heading back to Goma as a team leader of a group of 9 great individuals from the First Presbyterian Church of Berkeley. To access our team blog please see: http://www.gogoma.org/2009_Goma_Team/Welcome.html
i will update this blog with pictures when I return in August.
Thanks for checking in.
i will update this blog with pictures when I return in August.
Thanks for checking in.
Friday, February 13, 2009
Back to the Blogging
I have been out of the Congo for 4.5 months now. After spending 6 months of my life in Goma during 2008 I find that although I am physically in Park City, UT teaching kids how to ski, I find myself constantly thinking of my friends and the current situation in Goma. It's a strange disconnectedness as I find my mind wandering back and forth with from the resort extravagances of Park City to the just as real visions and memories of the smoke laden dirt roads of Goma.
This past weekend I was in Berkeley and had a quick meeting regarding the Lotoba nutrition project and it was a great way to reconnect myself, in a way, to the project that I worked so much on last year. The program continues to run, but is in need of a few changes to ensure it is a lasing and successful program.
General Nkunda has been captured by a joint Rwandan/Congo army effort (although I'm sure Rwanda gets the lions share of credit for this) and the citizens of the eastern DR Congo are optimistic, but rightly still weary, of any promises of peace.
I've been out of touch from this Blog for quite some time and have a thousand thoughts on my mind, but I'll make this short and try to update a bit more often going forward. I find myself reading 1 Kings these days and am struck by Solomon's request for wisdom, when given the chance to ask God for anything. That in itself is wisdom. May all you who may read this strive to make your decisions from a heart that seeks to be wise rather than powerful, rich, or right.
Blessings,
Timo
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