El Ébola es evitable y controlable: Declaración de la Red Panafricana de Noviolencia y Consolidación de la Paz
Difundimos la Declaración de la Red Panafricana de Noviolencia y Consolidación de la Paz, a la que nos hemos sumado desde Alternativa Antimilitarista.MOC.
Ebola is both preventable and controllable: Statement of the Pan African Nonviolence and Peacebuilding Network
World Leaders Take Action Now
Save precious lives, give peace a chance!
October 2014
We are a Pan-African Network of Peacemakers from over
30 countries across the African continent and represent more than 20
organisations. Our 20-member Steering Committee has representatives from
West, East, Central Africa, southern Africa and the islands. Some of
our members are also from the Middle East, Asia, Europe, and the
Americas, with strong African connections. We work at the grassroots
level, training in Nonviolence and mobilising communities for
Peacebuilding.
We are disturbed by the ongoing and alarmingly
vicious spread of the preventable and controllable Ebola virus that is
not only killing people but is spreading fear and further destabilising
West African communities. While the Ebola Crisis has become a global
emergency, we are concerned that there does not seem to be a concerted
political will at the global level to launch sufficient, well-planned
and immediate actions to put an end to the epidemic and save precious
lives. As stated by the World Health Organization, WHO, it can take six
to nine months to bring this devastation to an end. We are deeply
disturbed that grossly unequal treatment is meted out by the world in
its response towards this preventable crisis in West Africa. While those
from more developed countries have received swift medical treatment and
have positively responded to the trial drugs, those in African nations
are succumbing to the virus unnecessarily. As observed by Peter Piot,
the researcher who discovered the virus, “It took the death of a
thousand African(s) and the repatriation of two Americans before a
public emergency was declared.” Our failure to act now can only lead to
more catastrophes in Liberia, Guinea, Sierra Leone and West Africa at
large.
Failure to act now could also lead to intensified
conditions for violence and conflict, as people scramble for food,
medicines and other basic necessities. While recognizing the
responsibility that the African Union has already taken, the swift
intervention of Cuba and the work of grassroots commitments already
underway, we appeal (to both governmental and non-governmental leaders
from within and outside the continent) OR (the United Nations and
leaders of countries with efficient resources) for urgent medical and
humanitarian interventions which will ensure that a maximum number of
lives are saved.
We call upon the AU to strengthen its response by
appointing a special Envoy on the Fight against Ebola with immediate
effect. The Special Envoy must have a mandate to take all necessary
measures, and with both the budget and the authority to take short-term
action so as to respond effectively to the rapidly changing
circumstances. We also call for the Special Fund to address immediate
and long term medical and socio-economic needs of those nations and
communities affected by the crisis.
At the same time, we strongly caution against any
militarisation of humanitarian assistance to the affected areas. Utmost
care must be taken to ensure that the deployment of military health
personnel is strictly subjected to civilian authority. We are concerned
that this medical and human crisis not be exploited for continued
military, political or economic advantages by any country or party.
The Ebola crisis is a manifestation of
under-development and the deplorable health-care delivery systems in
most parts of Africa, often emerging from war and violent conflicts.
Liberia has been hit hard by this crisis because it is a fragile state,
recovering from decades of turmoil and civil war. We call for immediate
steps to improve the health and medical infrastructure for all countries
on the African continent to ensure better healthcare now and for the
future.
We can only defeat the Ebola epidemic if we
acknowledge that this is not a local problem, but a global threat with
common responsibilities for which there should be coordinated
international actions utilizing without bias the latest medical and
health care technologies available in our world With coordinated
international people-centred action, we can heal the sick and build
healthy, peaceful societies as well.
Issued by:
The Pan African Network on Nonviolence and Peacebuilding Steering Committee
Miguel Gomes Antonio (Angola) SACHI
Elavie Ndura (Burundi/USA)
Rosemary Garsi (Cameroon) Embrace Dignity
Koldobi Velasco (Canary Islands) AA-MOC
iaku Dianzenza (DRC / South Africa)
Sherif Joseph Rizk (Egypt)
Kesia-Onam Togo-Birch (Ghana) WANEP
Benard Lisamadi Agona (Kenya) CAPI
Steve Sharra (Malawi) LCD Malawi
Fiona Mwale (Malawi) AWANICh
Paulina Dempers (Namibia) Namibia United African Alliance Community
Oussenia Alidou (Niger / USA) African Women Coalition Against War
Olufemi Oluniyi (Nigeria / USA) AFPREA
Nozizwe Madlala- Routledge (South Africa) Embrace Dignity
Moses Monday John (South Sudan) ONAD
Mamoun Abdallah (Sudan) SONAD
Musa Hlophe (Swaziland)
Abdeslam Omar Lahsen (Western Sahara) AFRAPRADESA
Charity Mungweme (Zimbabwe / South Africa) Action Support Centre
Miles Rutendo Tanhira (Zimbabwe / Sweden) Journalist
Contact Persons:
Moses John (mosesjoa@gmail.com) & Nozizwe Madlala-Routledge (nozizwemr@gmail.com)
(Co-Convenors)
Ver comunicado en el sitio de la IRG
Comentarios