Issue 1, June 2006 - Australian Red Cross
Transcription
Issue 1, June 2006 - Australian Red Cross
theHUMANITARIAN june 2006 Issue 1 Just say yes dealing with discrimination the heart of cyclone Larry behind bars Australian Red Cross and beyondblue join forces theHUMANITARIANnews 2 theCONTENTS Issue 1 Editorial 5 6 Welcome to the first edition of theHumanitarian. The main purpose of this magazine is to explore issues that are of importance to people who hold common basic humanitarian values and to share with you, the reader, news on the ways in which these issues are being addressed. 17 This is a different approach for Australian Red Cross. We are not looking inwardly but outwardly. We are not simply self congratulating our work in local and international communities but we are seeking engagement with broader audiences on the basis of common concerns. For example, in this edition, Emma Tom, one of Australia’s brightest young journalists, joins us to take a very contemporary look at discrimination and how the individual can bring about change. We also look at the experience of women and war and, closer to home, the faces of tropical cyclone Larry and the heart-warming response from around Australia. This new approach signals change that is permeating the Australian Red Cross on a very pragmatic level. Rather than eight different magazines we are producing one national magazine with local information for each state. We aim to be more efficient and effective as a leading humanitarian organisation and will demonstrate our commitment to that aim in this and future editions. Robert Tickner chief executive officer Australian Red Cross << Just say yes Emma Tom, columnist for The Australian, considers the subtle forms of discrimination 15 theFEATURES Cyclone Larry Australian Red Cross workers on the ground in the hours and days after cyclone Larry >> 6 Behind Bars In any situation of armed conflict or internal violence, individuals are captured and detained >> 15 Community Care Australian Red Cross to lead a community care pilot >> 17 theINSIDE News, features and updates after page 7 Page 3 inBRIEF Responding to Cyclone Larry Australian Red Cross activated its disaster services to assist those affected by tropical cyclone Larry which crossed the coast near Innisfail in late March. One of the first to provide assistance to people in the areas affected by the cyclone, Red Cross worked closely with the Queensland Department of Emergency Services and the Australian Defence Force to provide food and emergency shelter. More on page 6. Red Cross launches the Indonesian Disaster Appeal Review of Australia’s plasma fractionation arrangements Red Cross has responded to an earthquake that shook the island of Java, leaving at least 2,700 people dead and 3,000 injured. The Australian Government is currently undertaking a review of Australia’s plasma fractionation arrangements under the Australia-US Free Trade Agreement. The Review, which is headed by a former head of the Foreign Affairs and Trade department, Philip Flood, AO, will consider whether the fractionation (or manufacturing) process should be opened up to competition as part of the Free Trade Agreement. Image – REUTERS/Crack Palinggi courtesy www.alernet.org A further 200,000 people have been left homeless by the magnitude 6.2 quake that struck the Indonesian island on 27 May. Initial reports indicate that the most severe damage occurred in the capital Yogyakarta, where an estimated 70 – 80 percent of houses have fully collapsed. Timor-Leste Appeal launched Red Cross launched an appeal to support the people affected by the current unrest in Timor-Leste at the end of May. Funds raised from the appeal will help provide food and other relief items such as tarpaulins, tents, household items, and mosquito nets, as well as logistical and communications support. Up to fifty thousand people are estimated to have left their homes because of the violence and are living in makeshift camps around the country. ‘By launching this appeal we can help with the immediate needs of those who have fled their homes. It will also help us contribute to the longer-term development of Australia’s closest neighbour,’ says Robert Tickner, CEO of Australian Red Cross. Local Red Cross volunteers have been distributing food, bottled water, tents, tarpaulins and other essential supplies to affected people. Additional medical supplies, as well as 1,000 family tents and six field hospital tents are being shipped to the earthquake zone. Red Cross Calling supports vulnerable Australians The 2006 Red Cross Calling Appeal has almost come to an end, with funds still rolling in from the army of volunteers, Red Cross branch members, school students, workplaces and service groups involved. This year, over 120,000 volunteers across the country offered to knock on doors and fundraise for the March Appeal. To date, more than $7.5 million has been banked. Red Cross relies on these funds to help cover the costs of running over 60 community services across Australia, targeting people living in disadvantage. Our sincere thanks to all our loyal supporters who helped us to raise these vital funds, and our wonderful donors who gave generously to the Appeal. The ARCBS has provided a comprehensive submission to the Review Committee which is available on our website at www.donateblood.com.au The Committee is due to report to the Minister for Health and Ageing, Tony Abbott, later in the year. Operation Lifeblood The Australian Red Cross Blood Service (ARCBS) are trying to recruit 45,000 new donors around Australia during May, June and July. To become a blood donor call 13 14 95. As part of Operation Lifeblood – and as World Blood Donor Day falls right in the middle of it – we’ve also joined with some corporate supporters to say thank you to all existing and new donors. In June and July, you can enter a competition to win a unique gourmet experience, for you and five of your friends at Maggie Beer’s Pheasant Farm in the Barossa Valley. Just make sure you and your five friends all give blood during June or July and tell us in 25 words or less why you’re special! To find out more, visit www.operationlifeblood.com theHUMANITARIANnews 4 Maria Headley is the sort of woman who gets called nasty names on the back of toilet doors. Yet this 20something New York writer gets my vote for anti-discrimination role model of the decade. Headley, an aspiring playwright, was sick of being single and decided to stop being so judgmental about potential partners. She then made the extraordinary decision to date anyone who asked her out—regardless of their age, appearance, profession or gender. Over the period of a year, Headley hit the town with about 150 people including a homeless man, an actress, a Microsoft millionaire, a carpet salesman, a boxer, a 70-year-old salsa dancer, a family-minded lesbian, an actress and an "ex-coke-head cowboy Colombian" handyman. She recorded her remarkable adventures in a book called The Year of Yes which has just been released in Australia by HarperCollins. While some people may find Headley's actions shocking—and perhaps even a little salacious—I have nothing but admiration for her bold social experiment. I think it demonstrates an open-mindedness and generosity of spirit sadly lacking in our individualistic society. It is also a vital reminder that true tolerance starts at home. Perhaps you've been to a party and heard someone start a rant with the old ‘I'm not racist but...’ line. This all-toocommon (and almost always erroneous) opener reflects our tendency to view discrimination as something only other people do: Bastardly bosses who sack staff for having wheelchairs, dark skin, or the wrong set of secondary sexual characteristics, for instance. The unfortunate extension to this line of thinking is assuming that solving discrimination is always someone else's responsibility, too. ‘Surely there are laws to take care of these sorts of unpleasantries,’ we tell ourselves. ‘Surely there's some sort of tribunal...’ In reality, however, discrimination is a subtle and insidious beast that often goes unexamined and unremedied. Most of us are aware of race-, religion-, gender- or disability-based prejudice, but what about other forms of discrimination relating to people's financial, intellectual, social or subcultural status? Have you ever treated someone less than fairly because they dressed like a Goth? (If so, you may be interested to learn that, contrary to the cat-killing stereotypes, a recent academic study showed that Goths actually tend to be peace-loving and intellectual high achievers.) The unpalatable truth is that we all have the potential to behave in a discriminatory manner—even those of us who pride ourselves on our upstanding equal opportunity-ism. I, for instance, regard myself as one of the most non-judgmental people I know. My effervescent network of family and friends includes folk of many ages, cultural backgrounds and sexual orientations. Some wear suits, while others think the height of sartorial elegance is a silver ring dangling from the nostrils. A few worship Muhammad, while others kneel before punk rocker Courtney Love. Yet, despite all this, I know I have blind spots, particularly when I'm frightened, angry or stressed. Say, for example, someone does something stupid on the road. Almost involuntarily, I'll strain to catch a glimpse of the driver to see if they conform to stereotypes about who drives badly in Australia. I've never actually verbalised anything sexist, ageist or Volvo-ist under these circumstances, but I'm embarrassed to admit that there are times when the inside of my head is as vitriolic and hate-filled as the most reactionary of talk-back radio programs. The first thing I do to counter my discriminatory tendencies is to stop denying they exist. Rather than puffing myself up about being Ms Broadminded, I recognise that every so often I slip into shock-jock mode. I then take steps to avoid acting out my inner Alan Jones. Let's say that, yet again, my bicycle and I have narrowly avoided being pulverised by a car driver who looks like she's from the hypothetical country of Nicole Kidman. ‘Bloody Nicole Kidmanians,’ I'll huff as I dust myself off. “They're all the bloody same. Vapid, self-obsessed and absolute assassins behind the wheel.” Once I've finished fuming and taken a couple of deep breaths, I begin the debrief with a series of logic-based questions. ‘How do I know for sure that this driver is from Nicole Kidman?’ I'll ask myself. ‘Sure, she looked like she was, but how can I be certain?’ What if she actually came from a neighbouring country such as Angelina Jolie or Jennifer Aniston? ‘OK, so let's say she IS from Nicole Kidman,’ I'll continue (often getting some weird looks from people who discriminate against dishevelled cyclists talking to themselves by the side of the road). ‘Does this mean everyone from her country is a clone? And how much do I really know about this nation's inhabitants given that my only experience is a couple of National Geographic specials and a few bitch sessions with friends who probably haven't met any Nicole Kidmanians in person either?’ By this stage, I've calmed down enough to continue on my way, optimistic that if Just say Page 5 I ever meet a Nicole Kidman in less perilous circumstances, I'll be able to relate without a whole load of discriminatory baggage. by Emma Tom While cognitive processes such as this are all well and good, the downside is that they're reactive rather than proactive. That's why I'm such a big fan of Maria Headley. Instead of merely deconstructing her discriminatory reactions, she took things one step further and went out of her way to interact with people she would normally have shunned (her particular blind spots included mimes and the wearers of sweater vests). Instead of pretending not to see her fellow citizens, she made eye contact, beamed and welcomed them into her life, even if it was just for a single coffee. While I'm not suggesting everyone adopt Headley's extreme approach to the letter, I would invite you to experiment with her attitude by reaching out and making a connection with someone who has a look or who comes from a background you'd normally reject. I'm no psychic (in fact I'm still battling a few prejudicial views about this particular bunch) but I do predict that you'll be surprised at how difficult and yet how rewarding this exercise will be. Emma Tom is a Sydney author, broadcaster and musician who writes a column for The Australian. yes Richard (left) and Deyar Mosa, residents of public housing flats in Melbourne attend a soccer clinic organised by Jesuit Social Services. theHUMANITARIANfeature 6 Image - Newspix, Peter Wallis cyclonelarrymaking a difference in the North Australian Red Cross workers on the ground in the hours and days after cyclone Larry faced tough but rewarding times. Far north Queensland residents warmly welcomed over 700 Red Cross staff and volunteers from across the state and Australia who answered their urgent call for help following the cyclone’s devastating impact. Authorities reported hundreds of millions of dollars in property damage and crop losses to communities in an arc that stretched from Cairns to Tully. Greg Goebel, executive director, Queensland Red Cross, says cooperation with government and other emergency agencies had been the starting point for a successful working partnership as recovery efforts got underway. ‘It certainly allowed us to triage so we could get things done immediately. It enabled Red Cross to provide help to those most in need,’ Mr Goebel says. Red Cross volunteers provided 24-hour care at the Innisfail TAFE which had become the community’s central evacuation point for those who lost everything and had no place to go. The Red Cross Emergency Evacuation Centre at the TAFE building housed over 200 people during its ten days of operation in addition to providing food, water, clothing and reassurance for the people driven from their homes. Image - Electric Images Meanwhile, Red Cross ground crews began visits to more rural communities including Babinda, Silkwood, Kurrimine Beach, Cowley Beach and Mourilyan. Visits by door-to-door volunteers checked on the health and well-being of people who remained in their homes. Robert Tickner, Australian Red Cross CEO, says volunteer and staff teams had earned the deep admiration of the people they helped in the far northern communities. By Peter Rochman Rose Munez and her daughter received shelter and food at Innisfail TAFE after cyclone Larry struck. theHUMANITARIANtheINSIDE world WIDE theINSIDE Picking up the pieces in Pakistan Red Cross has revived its 'Asia Quake' appeal calling on Australians to support long-term recovery efforts in the areas worst hit by the October 8 disaster in Pakistan. Image - Arzu Ozsoy/Federation A Pakistan Red Crescent Society volunteer helps villagers load corrugated iron sheets onto a jeep to be driven into the mountains of Kaghan Valley. theCONTENTS greater access to Solomon Islands health care hiv/aids the power of the image conflict in Darfur continues Now that the northern winter has ended, the focus of the massive international humanitarian operation has shifted from emergency relief to recovery. The International Red Cross has revised its initial emergency appeal upwards from $160 million to approximately $250 million to fund the recovery phrase. The Red Cross Red Crescent recovery plan, which covers activities between March 2006 and December 2008, aims to strengthen primary health care services, increase water and sanitation facilities, improve shelter, rebuild community buildings such as clinics, hospitals and schools, and boost the capacity of the Pakistan Red Crescent Society to lead the recovery efforts. During the initial emergency phase of the operation, the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement provided assistance to over 960,000 people in North West Frontier Province and Pakistan-administered Kashmir. This included 18,000 tonnes of aid, such as 57,000 winterised tents. In addition, approximately 227,000 patients received medical assistance at Red Cross Red Crescent emergency response units, field hospitals and mobile health facilities. Australian Red Cross has so far deployed 22 aid workers to assist in the emergency phase of the response, some of whom have now returned from mission, while others are still in the field. Avian Flu appeal launched In March, Australian Red Cross launched the ‘Avian Flu appeal’ in support of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, global call for approximately $18.4 million. Funds raised through this appeal will be used to assist countries in their preparedness for the potential worldwide spread of avian influenza and the potential risk of this leading to a pandemic of human influenza. More than 40 countries have reported the deadly avian influenza virus strain H5N1 in wild birds and domestic poultry. Avian influenza has spread rapidly across Asia, Europe, the Middle East and Africa through migratory birds. To date, the International Federation and National Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies are preparing for or responding to avian influenza in close to 30 countries. The funds raised through this appeal will be used for the following activities: – to support disaster preparedness, response and recovery activities of the International Federation and National Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies – to fund any deployment of specialist aid workers to countries to assist in the International Red Cross response – to support any Australian Red Cross programs of assistance in affected countries To donate to the ‘Avian Flu appeal’: visit www.redcross.org.au or call 1800 811 700 toll free. theHUMANITARIANtheINSIDEWorldWide theINSIDE Nationwide mosquito net distribution in Niger More than two million mosquito nets were delivered to mothers of children under the age of five in Niger in April. The intensive distribution campaign was timed to coincide with the start of Niger’s wet season in May, and aims to protect 3.5 million children from malaria. Tsunami update Helping the visually impaired Ambulance Service A new Australian Red Crossfunded project will assist visually impaired people who lost glasses in the recent tsunami disaster and provide eye-care services to others who were displaced. Banda Aceh and Aceh Besar now have fully trained and functioning ambulance services with trained ambulance staff operating equipped vehicles that are linked by a radio network to their base station. These centres have acted as pilot projects and three more centres have been identified for training and development. The International Organisation for Migration held the $3-million project’s first mobile eye clinic in Matara, southern Sri Lanka, in early March 2006. The program will help up to 100,000 people in tsunami-affected areas, of whom 75,000 will receive free glasses if sight-related problems are detected. Reconstruction on Nias Island Construction of the remote Nias Island was completed in March, with the building of 254 family homes, a health clinic, two primary schools, nine bridges and three clean water systems. Image - Federation Mosquito nets delivered to families in Niger aim to protect 3.5 million children from malaria. Nias Island was one of the areas where the tsunami had a very obvious impact says, Tsunami team general manager Chris Staines. ‘The coral reefs were lifted about one metre above sea level, so it was practically jutting out of the water leaving the existing pier totally useless apart from being somewhere to fish from.’ The program was in partnership with ‘Zero to One Foundation’. The ambulance project is a ‘consortium’ project where several Red Cross Societies have come together to combine skills and resources to deliver support to the Indonesian Red Cross Ambulance services in Nangroe Aceh Darussalam Province for the next five years. Consortium members include Indonesian Red Cross; Australian Red Cross; Norwegian Red Cross; German Red Cross; and Hong Kong Red Cross. Temporary living centres established in Aceh A number of temporary shelters have been completed in the province of Aceh in the last four months. Seventy two families have received replacement tents, 125 families now have transitional shelter and over 400 families are in the process of receiving transitional shelter. Maldives cleaned up The successful distribution of the nets, which took place in two week-long phases, had a clear commitment from the people of Niger, including 3,850 Red Cross volunteers and another 16,150 vaccinators and community workers who played an essential role in reaching the remotest areas of this West Africa country. The Niger Red Cross Society played a vital role in ensuring the nets were correctly hung and used. Image - Federation 254 family homes have been built for residents of Nias Island. The Maldives Waste Management program is beginning to show visual signs of progress, with the clean up of seven of the 74 tsunami-affected islands. More than 800 Maldivian Islanders took part in sustainable waste management training sessions, contributing to the clean up of their islands. In addition, six waste management centres have now been constructed and handed over to island communities. Clean up of all of the islands is expected to be completed by March 2007. The Weathercoast is only accessible by boat or helicopter. Residents of Komate at a hygiene and sanitation workshop. Deidre Ballinger (right) preparing for class. Solomon Islands greater access to health care During the ‘unrest’ in the Solomon Islands from 1998 to 2003, government infrastructure was heavily affected and the health of the population suffered immensely. Although calm has been restored with the intervention of the Regional Assistance Mission to the Solomon Islands, rebuilding the medical, educational and social systems has been a longer-term challenge. Deidre Ballinger has seen those challenges first hand in her work with the Solomon Islands Red Cross (SIRC) staff to establish a community-based health awareness program which aims to provide remote communities with information to help them improve health and hygiene practices. As an Australian Red Cross technical advisor, Deidre’s work in the Solomon Islands’ remote ‘Weathercoast’ is a long way from her ten years as a nurse and midwife in the Northern Territory. She remains no less passionate, however, about the challenges and rewards of working in a cross-cultural environment. ‘I am constantly amazed at the human resilience, generosity and optimism of the Solomon Island people who struggle every day just to ensure they ‘…the whole village turns out to help haul the boat up the pebble beach where they will watch over it for the week while we trek up the hill to the villages we came to visit.’ have enough food to eat, let alone enjoy the luxuries of good antenatal care and comprehensive immunisation programs,’ she says. Deidre’s commute to work in this remote community accessible only by boat, helicopter, or, as Deidre describes it, ‘a very long walk’, involves a fourhour journey (more if the weather is bad) in the Red Cross fibreglass ‘canoe’. ‘When we reach the coast, the whole village turns out to help haul the boat up the pebble beach where they will watch over it for the week while we trek up the hill to the villages we came to visit,’ says Deidre. After wading through red, clay-like mud and balancing on bridges made of coconut trees to cross rivers, Deidre and her entourage finally arrive at the remote village. The Solomon Islands Health Awareness Program aims to promote behavioural change that will enhance lifestyles and make healthy choices possible for people on the Weathercoast and in northern Malaita. Guided by SIRC’s assessment, the Weathercoast’s awareness program is focussed on hygiene and sanitation practices (the causes of diarrhoea, skin and eye diseases), malaria and community-based first aid. ‘The SIRC staff are a constant inspiration’, says Deidre. ‘I have seen them continue to work with malariainduced fevers and they willingly give up their weekends for the frequent travel to the field.’ Australian Red Cross will continue to assist the Solomon Islands Red Cross to raise community awareness on other important health topics, such as HIV/AIDS and sexually transmitted diseases. The current project is funded by AusAID, the Australian Government Overseas Aid Agency, until early 2008. Images - Katica Dias Australian Red Cross theHUMANITARIANtheINSIDEWorldWide Red Cross volunteers in Myanmar reversing discrimination Recently in Myanmar, Red Cross workers discovered a five-year-old boy living in a box under a tree in the backyard of his parents’ house. His parents didn’t know this was the fate of their son because they had both died of AIDS several months earlier. But his relatives knew. They put him there. Assuming that the boy had contracted the HIV virus from his parents, his relatives confined him. Though they continued to bring him food, he was kept in these conditions for several months, banished from the shelter of his home. Eventually he was found by Red Cross staff working in the area and given medical treatment. As it turned out, he didn’t have HIV. He was just severely dehydrated and suffering from the effects of diarrhoea and worms. It was quite easy to ‘fix him up’ and the people living in the village regarded his recovery from AIDS as a bit of a miracle. That was their second assumption – that people with AIDS could be easily cured. Stories like this are common in Southeast Asia where an estimated 8.3 million adults and children live with HIV and an estimated 14 million children have lost one or both parents to HIV/AIDS. In Thailand, says Bangkok-based HIV/AIDS technical advisor, Elden Chamberlain, the stigma is further exacerbated by a new social order campaign to ‘clean up’ society. ‘The authorities went through this whole process of rounding up drug users. They had a real clamp-down on brothels and sex workers which drove everything underground.’ Similarly in Vietnam, ministries campaign against the ‘social evils’ of sex, drugs and homosexuality at the same time that others run serious campaigns aimed at reducing discrimination. In Vietnam, ministries campaign against the ‘social evils’ of sex, drugs and homosexuality at the same time that others run serious campaigns aimed at reducing discrimination. One of the challenges in Southeast Asia, says Mr Chamberlain, is the prevailing attitude towards homosexuality. ‘In the western world, people tend to be more forthcoming about their sexuality, whereas Asian men won’t admit they’re gay,’ he says. ‘Instead they have wives and carry on as if they’re heterosexual yet go underground to find sex workers and brothels.’ Mr Chamberlain says that despite attempts to raise awareness about HIV/AIDS there is still much ignorance and denial. ‘We realised that before we could do anything about reducing discrimination in society at large, we had to focus on the fact that it exists within our own Red Cross organisation.’ ‘Four years ago Red Cross was running a project to reduce stigma in cross border areas. One of the criteria was that 25% of the participants had to be living with HIV. At the time this was a hard target to achieve because stigma and discrimination within the Red Cross made people living with HIV/AIDS feel very uncomfortable about disclosing their status. But now, after a concerted HIV effort with the Red Cross in the region to raise the issue of stigma and discrimination, that situation has been reversed. The Red Cross is the only place where people living with AIDS feel like they are receiving the support they need. There is still work to do though we are currently working on a project to develop workplace policies and guidelines that protect the rights of staff and volunteers living with HIV,’ says Mr Chamberlain. Health care providers were another group of people who discriminated against people living with AIDS, he said. ‘On the one hand we were encouraging people to access their health care services but in doing so we put them in a situation where they would experience another level of discrimination. To address this we have been working very closely with the Asia Pacific Network to provide training and resources to health care workers around the region.’ So far the results have been encouraging, with pre- and post-tests taken in places such as Cambodia and Mongolia showing a marked improvement in attitude. ‘We need to be eternally vigilant – even the slightest reduction in prevention and support programs can have a significant impact on increasing the rates of HIV. And even with the best of efforts we are only accessing 25% of vulnerable populations meaning 75% of those most vulnerable to HIV still have not had any access to information or training in ways to protect themselves. All levels of society need to take the issue seriously and mobilise accordingly, especially government and community leadership before we stand a real chance of halting the epidemic.’ By Janine Gray AIDS theHUMANITARIANtheINSIDEWorldWide In November 1985, Paris Match magazine published a now famous photo of Omayra Sanchez, a 13-yearold Columbian girl trapped in debris caused by a mudslide following the eruption of a volcano in the country’s north. The image of the young girl, her eyes fixed on the lens, seemingly oblivious to her surroundings, is undeniably confronting. By the time the photographer, Frank Fournier, arrived at the scene, rescuers had long since given up their attempts to free the young girl. Shortly after the photo was taken, 60 hours after she was trapped, Omayra died of exposure. The picture sparked widespread controversy. People were appalled at the apparent voyeurism of the photo. Why hadn’t anyone done anything for her? And what right do photojournalists have to so exploitatively invade someone’s last precious moments? This debate is not a new one. In the not-for-profit sector, images of disaster victims and of recovery efforts are important in building the profile of appeals or causes. Yet at the same time, their potential to harm and belittle is almost universally acknowledged. The Code of Conduct for the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement and NGOs in Disaster Response demands that signatories recognise ‘disaster victims as dignified human beings, not hopeless objects’ (Principle 10). In other words, NGOs are forbidden from portraying people as passive recipients of aid – as broken and beaten individuals reliant on hand outs. They must in no way exploit those that they portray. the power of An undeniably important call, to be sure. But one that is itself potentially problematic or even short sighted. Ellen Whinnett is a journalist with Melbourne’s Herald Sun newspaper. She has written on a number of humanitarian crises, including a piece in February of this year that looked at the ongoing food crisis in the remote Sahel region of West Africa. Whinnett worked closely with Red Cross officials in Australia and in Niger to gather information on the size and nature of the endemic food shortages, as well as the response of the Red Cross. She also looked to the organisation to supply photos to accompany her piece, but was somewhat surprised with what was on offer. ‘The problem that I had was that the story was about widespread hunger and food shortages, but the images we were getting were of plump and apparently healthy, smiling mums and babies,’ she explained. ‘And from a news point of view, the photos that have the greatest impact are those that are confronting.’ The question is, therefore, whether the insistence of NGOs on maintaining the by shunning sensationalist shots that dramatically show suffering and grief, are NGOs missing opportunities to engage with the public and potential donors? dignity of victims of disaster or conflict can sometimes be at odds with the media’s need for dramatic, confronting imagery? And, if this is the case, does this conflict therefore impact upon NGOs generating publicity for their appeals? Says Whinnett: ‘I understand that these people are vulnerable and must not be exploited, even if that ‘exploitation’ is for the greater good in that the NGO is attempting to raise money for them and awareness for their plight. ‘But somehow we need to find a way to balance these two competing issues.’ So by shunning sensationalist shots that dramatically show suffering and grief, are NGOs missing opportunities to engage with the public and potential donors? In an interview with BBC some 20 years after taking his now infamous image, Frank Fournier defended his role and that of the photojournalist ‘I am very clear about what I do and how I do it, and I try to do my job with as much honesty and integrity as possible. I believe the photo helped raise money from around the world in aid and helped highlight the irresponsibility and lack of courage of the country's leaders,’ he said. ‘There are hundreds of thousands of Omayras around the world – important stories about the poor and the weak and we photojournalists are there to create the bridge.’ Arguably, then, not to have taken Omayra’s picture would have amounted to a greater betrayal of her and of those who survived the eruption. by Matt Cochrane Frank Fournier’s famous controversial image of Omarya Sanchez. theimage During the Niger appeal, Red Cross sent a selection of images to the media similar to this one. Image - © Frank Fournier/Contact Press Images. theHUMANITARIANtheINSIDEWorldWide conflict in Darfur continues but Red Cross remains According to UN estimates, up to 180,000 people have been killed and a further three million affected as a result of ongoing conflict in the Darfur region of Sudan. Hundreds of thousands of people have been forced to flee their homes and villages as this humanitarian crisis continues. While a tentative peace deal has recently been struck between the government and rebel forces, tensions remain. Australian Red Cross, working closely with the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), British Red Cross and the Sudanese Red Crescent, continues to run a primary health care clinic outside of the remote town of Gereida, in southern Darfur. Sitting in the shadows of a series of camps, the clinic currently houses between 70,000 and 90,000 displaced people, with more arriving every day. Between 400 and 500 people are treated daily, mainly for diarrhoea, malaria, and eye and skin infections, and there are supplementary feeding programmes run by the ICRC for malnourished children. ‘When we got there we found the area was called the ‘Steps to Hell’ because it was just so awful, and we said in the end that we had turned it into the ‘Steps to Heaven’. Health clinic helps malnourished children One of the efforts of Australian Red Cross in Darfur is to feed malnourished children back to health. Anne Carey, an Australian Red Cross nurse recently returned to Australia after eight months in charge of one of the Darfur feeding centres, described her work to theHumanitarian. ‘We’d see up to 600 a day in the (health) clinic, 800 in the moderately malnourished feeding area, and 80 to 100 in the severely malnourished area. There was fighting nearly all the time – every day in November – it was insecure most of the time,’ she says. Still, the efforts were worthwhile. ‘When we got there we found the area was called the ‘Steps to Hell’ because it was just so awful, and we said in the end that we had turned it into the ‘Steps to Heaven.’ In fact, so successful were their efforts, says Ms Carey, that they nearly got to the point of closing the severely malnourished centres. ‘We decreased the numbers almost to the point where we didn’t need it, before more came in,’ she says. Ms Carey has nothing but praise for the efforts of her team. ‘It was very positive, I wouldn’t mind going back. The team is what pulled it together. We got on so well, I couldn’t do anything without the team. We laughed a lot – that was good medicine.’ By Daniel Wilson Page 15 In any situation of armed conflict or internal violence, individuals are captured and detained and are at risk of brutal treatment, disappearance and extrajudicial execution. For decades, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has striven to visit prisoners and detainees behind prison walls where its action can make a difference. The Red Cross in some countries conduct detention visits as part of their mandate. They focus on the specific needs of detained asylum seekers and migrants including, for example, people who have breached the terms of their visa. How to deal with migration is a controversial political issue in Australia where public opinion is divided on the government’s policy of mandatory detention. During regular visits to detention centres, Australian Red Cross workers help detainees to communicate with their families through Red Cross messages, organise activities such as sewing and cooking classes, and provide clothing, phone cards and newspapers in different languages. ‘The detainees view our visits very positively even though our agreement with the government stipulates clear limits to what we can do,’ explains Hang Vo, Australian Red Cross manager of international tracing and refugee services. ‘We don’t really deal with detainee abuse allegations or publicly advocate on behalf of detainees. But there are a number of other organisations that do.’ behindbars The Canadian Red Cross Society has been visiting detention places since 1999 when the mass arrival of Chinese boat people in western Canada and their detention by authorities led to public concern. Trained volunteers now regularly monitor the situation of foreigners arrested under Canadian immigration laws. ‘We consider these detainees a particularly vulnerable group in need of protection,’ says Johanna Hökeberg Canadian Red Cross assistant manager for detention monitoring. Like the ICRC, Canadian and Australian Red Cross are aware that their reason for conducting detention visits are not always understood and accepted by members and the public at large. Ms Vo explains, ‘Initially we were concerned that the public would simply not support the work of the Red Cross with people often accused of not really being refugees. However, within the Red Cross there has already been a shift of perceptions. I think the more people know about our work in places of detention, the more they accept that it makes sense.’ A version of this article first appeared the ‘Red Cross Red Crescent’, the magazine of the Red Cross Movement, Issue 1 2006. theHUMANITARIANfeature 16 A Sydney stockbroker smokes the illicit drug ‘ice’ in his car before going to work. In Melbourne, a user shoots up in a side street. In Brisbane, a young girl contemplates suicide. In Perth, a man beats up his girlfriend after a big night of drinking. The statistics are hard to ignore – 80 to 90% of the major health burdens that affect young people in Australia are drug- and alcohol-related or a mental health issue. To address this disturbing fact, Australian Red Cross and beyondblue: the national depression initiative will be joining forces in July in a new peer education initiative that addresses both alcohol and other drugs and mental health issues such as depression and anxiety. This will be the first time these issues are addressed together within the context of a peer education model. At present the save-a-mate (SAM) program meets an identified service gap in Australia because most drug and alcohol training programs do not address the prevention and management of potential emergencies resulting from substance abuse. SAM’s peer education component has benefited over 10,000 young people, with a further 275,000 exposed to the program through their attendance at events and festivals. According to a recent National Drug and Alcohol Research report titled, ‘Co-Morbid Mental Disorders and Substance use Disorders,’ nine out of ten of the major health burdens impacting young Australian men are either drug and alcohol-related or a mental health problem. In the case of women, the figure is eight out of ten. SAM national manager, Shaun Hazeldine, who works closely with young people, sees the initiative with beyondblue as a natural progression from what is already offered through SAM. ‘Basically, we have the infrastructure and capacity and beyondblue have the knowledge and high profile about depression and anxiety.’ ‘When young people start to feel depressed or anxious they often self-medicate and then the problems get worse. Conversely, drug and alcohol use can lead to mental health problems. This is an area that demands attention when you consider 60% of people with mental health issues do not ask for help. One of the biggest barriers to getting help for mental health issues is the stigma associated with it, so young people won’t seek treatment when really they should.’ beyondblue senior program manager, Craig Hodges, says that while peer education programs have been widely used in the drug and alcohol arena for many years, they haven’t really been used extensively in the mental health area. ‘One of the biggest barriers to getting help for mental health issues is the stigma associated with it.’ ‘Essentially we’ll be bringing two of the key health issues facing young people together and educating them about the core issues associated with drugs and alcohol and depression and anxiety and how they’re linked.’ The program will initially be trialled in NSW and South Australia and evaluated to ascertain its effectiveness and reach. ‘This initiative provides a unique opportunity for two national organisations to work together in two priority health areas to develop a comprehensive program which can assist in educating young people about drug and alcohol and mental health issues,’ Mr Hodges says. Australian Red Cross & beyondblue join forces joiningforces save-a-mate volunteers at a music festival in Sydney earlier this year. Page 17 Image - Dave Tacon community care Australian Red Cross to lead Community Care Pilot Australian Red Cross has been asked to lead a 12-month community care pilot for the Department of Immigration, Multiculturalism and Indigenous Affairs (DIMA). The pilot is expected to show that adequate support to vulnerable people in the immigration system can improve their mental, emotional and physical health. It will also assist DIMA in their immigration work. Australian Red Cross domestic operations general manager, Noel Clement, says that Red Cross will work with government and non-government organisations to provide coordinated care for vulnerable people in the immigration systems. This will include people with mental and physical health issues, families with children and other people with significant support needs. ‘Prior to this program many people had been left with inadequate support in the community and reliant on the assistance that can be provided by already overstretched charities, so this is a real significant step forward in responding to humanitarian needs,’ says Mr Clement. Australian Red Cross will provide a casework service, including income support, access to health services and brokerage funds to enable referral to other welfare services (eg. counselling and support). Much of this work builds on the existing Australian Red Cross Asylum Seeker Assistance Scheme and Residence Determinations program models. Other welfare agencies will partner with Australian Red Cross to provide a specific service. theHUMANITARIANnews 18 Don’t close your eyes ‘I didn’t want to see this, but it happened anyway. I thought these things might pass us, but they’re happening today.’ That’s the message from Greg Arnold, front man of iconic Australian band ‘Things of Stone and Wood’ whose song (Close my eyes), was written specifically for Red Cross. Launched on World Red Cross Day on 8 May, Greg says he was inspired by the fact that it’s far too easy to ignore all the terrible news in the world. ‘The onslaught of images one sees and hears in the media can make us emotionally immune. Yet, there are those who don’t close their eyes and turn their backs, there are those who dedicate their lives to humanitarian work.’ Greg was joined on the recording by former Midnight Oil drummer, Rob Hirst, and Paul Greene, members of the critically acclaimed act Hirst and Greene. ‘Close my eyes’ was launched at an event held at Sydney’s State Library, as part of World Red Cross Day. The launch was co-hosted by Australian Red Cross and the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC). Page 19 workplacegiving Earlier this year, the Pricewaterhouse Coopers(PwC) Foundation tried something a little different to promote the charitable organisations they support through Workplace Giving. Rather than bombarding their staff with emails about the latest news on charity partners, they decided to hold a ‘Foundation Week’, where the organisations themselves came in to showcase the types of services they provide and to celebrate the difference being made as a result of their partnership with PwC. PwC Foundation national coordinator, Carolyn Bruce, explains the main objectives of Foundation Week were to introduce new charity partners, raise the profile of existing partners and encourage their people to make or refresh their pledge through PwC’s Workplace Giving program, PwC People Giving. The PwC Foundation re-survey their people every three years to ensure they continue to focus support on the cause areas and charities their people are most passionate about. After resurveying late last year, there was a noticeable swing towards environmental and health issues, says Ms Bruce. Other causes nominated by staff were poverty, disadvantaged youth and children. As one of PwC’s new charitable programs, Australian Red Cross spoke about the Good Start Breakfast program and handed out healthy breakfast items to staff during Foundation Week. ‘Prior to our partnership with the Red Cross, I didn’t realise that 70% of their programs were domestically focussed. I guess I’ve always thought of Red Cross as an organisation that helps disaster victims internationally and provides blood.’ ‘Foundation Week not only helped our staff understand what each of our charity partners does, it resulted in over 220 new or modified pledges, so it really exceeded our expectations. It also increased our overall participation in Workplace Giving by 2% nationally,’ says Ms Bruce. Mallesons’ partners and staff have been contributing to Australian Red Cross through Mallesons’ Workplace Giving program since 2001. Says pro bono and community programs manager Jane Farnsworth, ‘One of the benefits with Workplace Giving is developing a deeper relationship with the charitable organisation. For the past three years we’ve had a group of about 50 enthusiastic staff members who volunteer with Telecross and the Good Start Breakfast Club.’ Mallesons also provides pro bono legal assistance to Australian Red Cross. Workplace Giving is a simple yet powerful way for employees to assist Australian Red Cross to deliver services to vulnerable communities through dollars received via regular payroll deductions. In addition to Workplace Giving, the PwC Foundation work collaboratively with their charity partners, providing a package of support including pro bono services and volunteers through the PwC ‘In The Community’ initiative, which allocates staff one day’s paid leave per year to undertake teambased volunteering in the community. For legal firm Mallesons Stephens Jacques, one of the spin-offs from Workplace Giving was increasing the involvement of staff with charitable organisations. For more information on Workplace Giving contact national business partnerships manager Kellie Johnston at kjohnston@redcross.org.au taxtime As we get closer to 30 June 2006 and our thoughts turn towards tax returns, please keep an eye on your letterbox for the Red Cross Tax Appeal letter. Your tax deductible donations help support our 60 plus community services here in Australia. If you donate to the annual Red Cross Winter Appeal before June 30 it could result in a tax benefit to you in this financial year. The table below shows the real cost of your donations. Donation amount $50 $100 $250 $500 Income The real cost to you... $6,000 - $21,600 $41.75 $83.50 $208.75 $417.50 $21,601 - $63,000 $34.25 $68.50 $171.25 $342.50 $63,001 - $95,000 $28.25 $56.50 $141.25 $282.50 $95,001 and over $25.75 $51.50 $128.75 $257.50 There are now 4 easy ways to donate this financial year: Visit www.redcross.org.au to donate via our secure online donation facility. Call 1800 811 700 Mail your cheque or credit card details to Australian Red Cross GPO Box 2957 Melbourne VIC 8060 Or fax to (03) 8327-7905 theHUMANITARIAN In all activities our volunteers and staff are guided by the Fundamental Principles of the Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement. Humanity The International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement, born of a desire to bring assistance without discrimination to the wounded on the battlefield, endeavours, in its international and national capacity, to prevent and alleviate human suffering wherever it may be found. Its purpose is to protect life and health and ensure respect for the human being. It promotes mutual understanding, friendship, co-operation and lasting peace amongst all people. Impartiality It makes no discrimination as to nationality, race, religious beliefs, class or political opinions. It endeavours to relieve the suffering of individuals, being guided solely by their needs, and to give priority to the most urgent cases of distress. Neutrality In order to continue to enjoy the confidence of all, the Movement may not take sides in hostilities or engage at any time in controversies of a political, racial, religious or ideological nature. cover image Dave Tacon designer Miguel Valenzuela house mouse design pty ltd Independence The Movement is independent. The National Societies, while auxiliaries in the humanitarian services of their governments and subject to the laws of their respective countries, must always maintain their autonomy so that they may be able at all times to act in accordance with the principles of the Movement. theHumanitarian is published three times a year by Australian Red Cross mailing address 155 Pelham Street Carlton VIC 3053 Australia Voluntary Service It is a voluntary relief movement not prompted in any manner by desire for gain. Unity There can be only one Red Cross or Red telephone 00 11 61 3 9345 1800 Crescent Society in any one country. It must be open to all. It must carry on its humanitarian work throughout its territory. editor Janine Gray Universality The International Red Cross and Red sub editors Natasha Broadstock Kirsten John Crescent Movement, in which all Societies have equal status and share equal responsibilities and duties in helping each other, is worldwide. printer DPA printed on Zanders Mega Recycled National Office 155 Pelham Street, Carlton VIC 3053 Tel 03 9345 1800 ACT Cnr Hindmarsh Drive and Palmer Street, Garran ACT 2605 Tel 02 6206 6000 NSW 159 Clarence Street, Sydney NSW 2000 Tel 02 9229 4111 NT Cnr Lambell Terrace and Schultz Street, Larrakeyah NT 0820 Tel 08 8924 3900 QLD 49 Park Road, Milton QLD 4064 Tel 07 3367 7222 SA 207-217 Wakefield Street, Adelaide SA 5000 Tel 08 8100 4500 www.redcross.org.au TAS 40 Melville Street, Hobart TAS 7000 Tel 03 6235 6077 VIC 23-47 Villiers Street, North Melbourne VIC 3051 Tel 03 8327 7700 WA 110 Goderich Street, East Perth WA 6004 Tel 08 9325 5111 General enquiries Donations First Aid enquiries Blood Donor enquiries 1 800 246 850 1 800 811 700 1 300 367 428 13 14 95