AlertNet asked more than 100 humanitarian professionals, media personalities, academics and activists which of the world's "forgotten" emergencies they wanted the global media to focus on in 2005. Here are their top choices, with basic facts on each emergency. |
1. Killing in Congo
Democratic Republic of Congo still smouldering after devastating 1998-2003 conflict known as "Africa's World War"
neighbouring Rwanda still fuelling fighting in remote east
"The worst humanitarian tragedy since the Holocaust. Five million dead, and yet the neighbouring countries have gone unpunished as they drop in and out of the Congo to feed their greed. The greatest example on the planet of man's inhumanity to man."
John O'Shea, chief executive, GOAL
CRISIS PROFILE: What's going on in Congo?
CRISIS PROFILE: Why Burundi massacre is fanning fears of regional war
EXPERTS TALK: Killing in Congo
2. Nightmare in Uganda
Eighteen-year insurgency in the north by cult-like rebel group known as Lord's Resistance Army (LRA)
"One of the most incredible sights in the world is to see every night tens of thousands of Ugandan children flooding in from their rural homes to spend the night in towns and cities. They are seeking safety from being kidnapped by the LRA."
Larry Thompson, senior advocate, Refugees International
CRISIS PROFILE: What's going on in northern Uganda?
EXPERTS TALK: Nightmare in Uganda
3. Sudan's deadly conflicts
In Sudan's western Darfur region, attacks on black villagers by government-backed militia of Arab heritage have raised spectre of genocide
In southern Sudan, Africa's longest-running civil war has created one of the world's worst humanitarian crises
Simmering tensions in other areas such as Nuba mountains, Southern Blue Nile and Abyei risk flaring into Darfur-like conflicts
"In nearly 40 years of travelling the world, I have not witnessed any crisis that so vividly combines the worst of everything - armed conflict, acts of extreme violence, great tides of desperate refugees, hunger and disease, combined with an unforgiving desert climate."
Martin Bell, former journalist, British lawmaker and current UNICEF ambassador, on Darfur
CRISIS PROFILE: What's going on in Sudan's Darfur?
CRISIS PROFILE: hope and horror in southern Sudan
EXPERTS TALK-Sudan's deadly conflicts
4. AIDS out of control
Some 40 million living with HIV/AIDS worldwide, two-thirds in sub-Saharan Africa
"HIV/AIDS has been prominent now for over 20 years, and though the progress in the developed world has been admirable, the developing world is being eaten alive by this disease. We have not yet seen the economic consequences of the perishing of generations of wage earners, nor the psychological and spiritual damage done to millions of children raised without parents."
Pam Wilson, international relief coordinator, Operation Mercy
AlertNet round-up of HIV/AIDS facts and figures
HIV/AIDS in China and India
GRAPHIC: New HIV infections in 2003
EXPERTS TALK: AIDS out of control
5. West Africa on the edge
Liberia, Ivory Coast and Sierra Leone struggling for peace after years of brutal conflict
"West Africa needs a long-term effort, both locally and from the international community, if we are not to see a return to the carnage of the years before."
Maria Immonen, advocacy and communication, Lutheran World Federation
CRISIS PROFILE: W. Africa teeters between war and peace
CRISIS PROFILE: Is Ivory coast heading for all-out war?
6. Colombians uprooted
Almost 3 million driven from their homes after four decades of conflict, giving Colombia the world's third-biggest displaced population
"Life for the displaced is extremely harsh, with most living in conditions of extreme poverty and struggling for access to sufficient food."
James Morris, chief executive, World Food Programme
CRISIS PROFILE: Why have nearly 3 million Colombians fled home?
EXPERTS TALK: Uprooted Colombians
7. Chechen conflict
Tens of thousands killed and hundreds of thousands forced to flee home in a decade of conflict in Russia's breakaway republic
"The overall situation in the region is deteriorating. The authorities responsible in Russia are not addressing the human suffering and lack of security and level of trauma caused by the forces fighting in Chechnya."
Anna Morck, project manager, Norwegian Refugee Council
CRISIS PROFILE: Death and displacement in Chechnya
MAP-Caucasus republics in turmoil
EXPERTS TALK: Chechen conflict
8. Strife in Haiti
Political turmoil and lawlessness threatening food supplies, livelihoods and health services for hundreds of thousands in Western hemisphere's poorest country
"Haiti has so little, and with the political unrest and recent flooding, they have even less to help improve their lives. We've seen no coverage in the media of this crisis with such a focus on Iraq, and it's time to bring the world's attention back to what is happening there and how we can help."
Brenna Kupferman, Deputy Director and Partnership Development, ActionAid
CRISIS PROFILE: Is Haiti on the brink of civil war?
9. Crisis in Nepal
About 11,000 people killed in nine years of conflict between Maoist rebels and constitutional monarchy
"The conflict has had a big impact on economic and social activities throughout the whole country and
displaced large numbers of people, destroying livelihoods."
Ewa Eriksson, South Asia desk officer, International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies
CRISIS PROFILE: What's going on in Nepal?
CHRONOLOGY: Nepal's chequered political history
EXPERTS TALK: Crisis in Nepal
10. Infectious diseases
Malaria kills an African child every 30 seconds
Tuberculosis is leading cause of death among HIV-positive people
Dengue kills 24,000 people each year and infects hundreds of thousands more
"Despite international efforts, malaria mortality continues to rise as a result of poverty, weak health
infrastructure, and in some countries, civil unrest. These deaths are easily preventable."
Roy Probert, communications chief, International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies
EXPERTS TALK: Infectious diseases
FACTBOX- Malaria
FACTBOX - Tuberculosis
FACTBOX-dengue
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