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From: "IRIN" <[email protected]>
Date: 4 Feb 2017 09:03
Subject: The humanitarian cheat sheet: Trouble in CAR and WhatsApp for
crises ...
To: "ElisabethJanaina" <[email protected]>
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Today's humanitarian news and analysis

*Online version
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The humanitarian cheat sheet: Trouble in CAR and WhatsApp for crises
<http://irinnews.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=31c0c755a8105c17c23d89842&id=0df75b57e3&e=399c7ee738>



Every week, IRIN's team of editors curates a selection of some of the best
humanitarian reports, opinion, and journalism you may have missed and looks
ahead to give you the inside scoop on hot topics coming up:
Did you miss it?

*The
<http://irinnews.us12.list-manage2.com/track/click?u=31c0c755a8105c17c23d89842&id=232a3b88de&e=399c7ee738>**nearly
<http://irinnews.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=31c0c755a8105c17c23d89842&id=c8635fac36&e=399c7ee738>**
man
<http://irinnews.us12.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=31c0c755a8105c17c23d89842&id=924fd663cf&e=399c7ee738>*

The death of opposition leader Étienne Tshisekedi this week has deprived
the Democratic Republic of Congo of a unique political figure who was at
the forefront of the fight for democracy for over three decades.

Arguably, his voice is needed now more than ever. His death plays into the
hands of President Joseph Kabila’s supporters, who have consistently sought
to delay elections, threatening a New Year’s Eve accord with the opposition
in which Kabila agreed to step down this year and not run for a third term.
As African Arguments points out, “his departure robs the opposition of a
leader able to combine genuine street-level popularity with an ability to
squeeze out political deals. As popular anger mounts, the opposition will
have to work hard to rebuild a credible leadership.”

*Branding the Taliban*
<http://irinnews.us12.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=31c0c755a8105c17c23d89842&id=17eb90f7c2&e=399c7ee738>

The Taliban cared little about their image when they conquered Afghanistan
in the 1990s, and that didn’t change after they were overthrown in late
2001 and began a long and ongoing insurgency. But the group seems to have
“woken up to the importance of organisational symbols and their political
meaning”, according to this report by the Afghanistan Analysts Network.
Perhaps the Taliban are inspired by their newest enemy, the so-called
Islamic State, which has launched a barrage of propaganda since moving into
the region, as we reported this week
<http://irinnews.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=31c0c755a8105c17c23d89842&id=e662d1b1c6&e=399c7ee738>.
This
AAN report is part of a series focusing on changes the Taliban are
undergoing, and it focuses on their use of a white flag inscribed with an
“Islamic statement of faith” and sometimes their official name, the Islamic
Emirate of Afghanistan. Unlike the group’s previous iterations, the flag is
now constantly on display. Among other reasons for this is to “demonstrate
to the population that they, not the government, are the legitimate rulers
of Afghanistan”, says AAN.

*Getting the message*
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Messaging apps like WhatsApp, Snapchat, and Viber are already being used by
more than 2.5 billion people around the world, but humanitarian
organisations have yet to get to grips with these new communications
technologies and figure out how they can best be used to improve their
work, while avoiding potential pitfalls. This report from the International
Committee of the Red Cross considers unresolved questions that have held
back the use of messaging apps in humanitarian crises, particularly in
conflict settings, such as concerns about data protection and security,
which messaging app to use, and patchy network connectivity. It looks at
how some humanitarian organisations are already using messaging apps to
reduce communication costs, coordinate with other staff, and to maintain
contact with people in transit, such as refugees, or in conflict or
post-disaster situations where other communication methods are unavailable.
The report also flags up risks and challenges and provides a handy
comparison of privacy-friendly features on various apps.
One from IRIN:

*EU strategy stems *
<http://irinnews.us12.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=31c0c755a8105c17c23d89842&id=2e4ca5849f&e=399c7ee738>*migrant
<http://irinnews.us12.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=31c0c755a8105c17c23d89842&id=dac664c5b0&e=399c7ee738>**
flow from Niger, but at what cost?*
<http://irinnews.us12.list-manage2.com/track/click?u=31c0c755a8105c17c23d89842&id=9284eedef1&e=399c7ee738>

In researching this story on the EU-funded and EU-inspired crackdown on
migrants and smugglers in Niger, IRIN Migration Editor Kristy Siegfried
unearthed an unexpected news nugget
<http://irinnews.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=31c0c755a8105c17c23d89842&id=759255ec75&e=399c7ee738>.
The EU had been boasting about the effectiveness of its policy of
partnering with African countries by using the incorrect main stat that
only 1,525 migrants headed northwards from Niger during November. This
represented a stunning 88% drop on the previous month’s figure of 12,654
and a staggering 98% decline since a summer high of 71,904. Okay, the
figure was taken from International Organization for Migration reports,
which were later amended, but why did the EU not interrogate such a dodgy
figure further and why was it still being used to promote the expansion of
the EU’s policies to other African nations after the IOM had corrected it?

The bottom line however, as IRIN contributor Ibrahim Manzo Diallo reported
from Niger’s main transit hub of Agadez, is that the strategy has proved
brutally effective at reducing or displacing numbers heading northwards to
the Libyan coast, hoping to get passage to Europe. What is less clear
though is whether the hundreds of millions of euros the EU is ploughing
into development aid to pay for the crackdown will do much in the long run
to compensate for what had been a thriving industry. “Before this witch
hunt for migrant smugglers began, the young people of Agadez had work,”
explains Abdourahamane Koutata, president of the Agadez region’s youth
council. “Each Monday, they would transport migrants into Libya or into
Algeria and earn a lot of money. But now, most of them are in prison.”
What’s coming up?

*CAR trouble*
<http://irinnews.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=31c0c755a8105c17c23d89842&id=6632458ed4&e=399c7ee738>

The UN secretary-general’s special representative to the Central African
Republic, who also heads the UN’s troubled MINUSCA mission, is due to
address the Security Council later this month. Parfait Onanga-Anyanga’s
address comes at a precarious time for CAR. The government of President
Faustin-Archange Touadéra has extremely limited control outside the
capital, Bangui, and efforts to convince the Muslim-dominated ex-Séléka and
Christian anti-Balaka rebel groups to disarm and give up their hold on
territory has failed. MINUSCA has also proved incapable of providing the
required security.

What to do? This Security Council report lists three possible options:
MINUSCA adopts a “proactive approach” and is appropriately financed to
expand the areas under its control; countries in the region cooperate and
implement the existing sanctions regime to eliminate illicit arms
trafficking to the rebel groups and crack down on natural resource
exploitation; the sanctions regime is widened to include additional
individuals and entities.

The report acknowledges that CAR is not a “top priority issue for the
Council”. But it also notes that while “some” Council members are concerned
over the financial implications of a more resolute MINUSCA, “there seems to
be a consensus that achieving security and stabilising the CAR will
necessitate a long-term engagement from the Council” and its peacekeepers.
Read into that what you will.

*New Yemen appeal*
<http://irinnews.us12.list-manage2.com/track/click?u=31c0c755a8105c17c23d89842&id=ad8b1f5768&e=399c7ee738>

Donald Trump’s first special op as commander-in-chief was a disaster by
almost all accounts, except of course for that of the new president himself
– he’s called it a success. The botched 29 January raid on al-Qaeda in the
Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) in al-Bayda, Yemen left as many as 23 civilians
dead, including 10 children, as well as a US commando. Media coverage was
largely drowned out by Trump’s actions (and his detractors) at home, but
this was still the rare occasion when Yemen made a few headlines, likely a
result of the death of a member of SEAL Team 6. Here’s hoping the tragedy
will also draw a few eyeballs to the country’s ongoing humanitarian crisis,
because while AQAP is stronger than it has ever been, it’s just one of the
dangers Yemen’s civilians deal with. You can read up on the group and the
role it plays in the country’s complicated conflict in this detailed and
timely report from the International Crisis Group. So what’s new? The UN is
expected to launch its appeal for 2018 donor funding to Yemen on 7
February. It’s said to be asking for $2 billion dollars, up from last
year’s $1.8 billion ask – that one is only 55% funded. Meanwhile, the
bombing and the fighting are surging, and the needs are only growing.

*A climate union?*
<http://irinnews.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=31c0c755a8105c17c23d89842&id=7b3802f06f&e=399c7ee738>

If you’re in London and interested in the labour movement’s take on climate
change, attend this one-day conference on 11 February featuring sessions on
migration and the role of unions and civil society in responding to the
crisis. Why are unions getting involved? “Climate change is devastating
peoples lives and livelihoods and whole economies, and is a growing concern
to trade unions for whom effective responses are now a fundamental issue of
justice – economic, employment and income security,” say the organisers.
One purpose of the conference, they say, is to discuss the need for legal
protection of people displaced by the effects of climate change, and to
build a movement that will advocate for political leadership on the issue.

ks-as-jf-oa/ag

*(TOP PHOTO: Ex-Seleka combatants waiting for their Chief in a meeting in
Bambari, 400km northeast of Bangui on 8 **August,** 2014. CREDIT:  UN
Photo/Catianne Tijerina)*
seleka.jpg
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News <http:///news> Migration <http:///migration> Conflict
<http:///conflict> Human Rights <http:///human-rights> The weekly
humanitarian round-up IRIN <http:///byline/irin> Africa
<http:///africa> Central
African Republic
<http:///afrique/afrique-de-lest/central-african-republic> Congo,
Republic of <http:///afrique/afrique-de-lest/congo-republic> Niger
<http:///afrique/afrique-de-louest/niger> Afghanistan
<http:///asia/afghanistan> United Kingdom
<http:///europe/united-kingdom> Middle
East and North Africa <http:///middle-east-and-north-africa> Yemen
<http:///middle-east-and-north-africa/yemen>

*Read on
<http://irinnews.us12.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=31c0c755a8105c17c23d89842&id=694786c5e1&e=399c7ee738>*

------------------------------
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