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Ethiopian Famine Averted

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Among many of the titbits of useful advice I picked up as I worked my way through Britain's regional newspapers was one that has caused me no end of trouble. "Rob," one of the old hands at The Herald (I should point out this is a Scottish national paper - not a British regional paper) said, "The stories that you don't write are just as important as the stories you do write." The job of a journalist, he went on to explain, is to sift through the assorted rubbish that arrives each day and work out what is true, what is important and what is news. Everything else could be passed over with a dismissive, "The Scotsman might do this tomorrow but frankly it's bullshit," to the news editor. Sound advice. But it has been causing me problems as a freelancer sitting several thousand miles away from the foreign desk. The issue is that a quiet word in the ear of my foreign editor that such and such a story is rubbish, doesn't stop some hotshot writer from London bigfooting me or another freelancer offering said story to the desk. Often the first I'll know about it is reading my own paper online. I raise this now because I deliberately haven't written about the "impending famine" in Ethiopia. Charities have been taking journalists on junkets to view stick-thin children and talking up the crisis in terms of global warming and natural disasters. This was not enough for me. If I was going to write about an Ethiopian hunger I wanted to discuss the country's expensive wars in Somalia, Ogaden and Eritrea, its abuse of human rights in Ogaden and its denial of drought. That was the way the to do the story properly. Meanwhile a steady stream of wannabe Michael Buerkes was filing stories such as this, in my own paper:
Surprisingly, when The Times visited the region, the fields were alive with maize and most afternoons a warm rain fell. “Here the problem is acute,” said Jean de Cambry, the emergency co-ordinator for Médecins Sans Frontières in southern Ethiopia. “It is very surprising and very strange, because everything is so green. But food stocks at household level are empty or close to empty.”
Or this imaginative way of producing a famine story in the LA Times:
They call it the green hunger. Four-foot cornstalks sprout from rain-soaked earth, and wind billows fields of teff, the staple Ethiopian grain. Goats and cattle are getting fat on lush grasses -- but the children are still dying.
Each time these stories appeared I would call colleagues to ask whether it was time to go to Ethiopia. Each time they said not yet - including one TV reporter who had just filed a harrowing account of children starving, but had to admit it wasn't really as bad as all that. A day's filming was canned because the area was too green. So it wasn't a massive surprise when I received the following press release from the Irish aid agency Goal:
Ann Bourke, one of the most experienced of GOAL’s field personnel, reported with optimistic news from Ethiopia today. Ann stated that the interventions of aid agencies such as GOAL, and fact that it has started to rain have had very beneficial effects on the famine in Ethiopia. Although it is too early to be sure, indications are that a major famine may have been adverted.
This is clearly great news for the people of Ethiopia. And it is still early days. And maybe it was the reporting and PR work by charities that averted a crisis. But at a time when fundraisers complain about compassion fatigue could it be another example of journalists putting their critical faculties to one side in favour of reporting a worst-case scenario peddled by NGOs with an interest in collecting cash? Did we jump when they cried wolf? I wasn't the only Nairobi-based reporter who decided not to go to Ethiopia, only to see a colleague based on another continent file an "Ethiopia Starves" piece. It all reminds me of another piece of advice I picked up at The Herald, where the editor was fond of shooting down stories in conference with a terse: "That might be what they say, but is it true?"

12 Comments

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Stegg | October 4, 2008 2:34 PM | Reply

As usual, kids starving is news, crops growing and rain falling is not (unless it causes catastrophic floods, of course).

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Simon | October 4, 2008 3:27 PM | Reply

Of course it was true, it was only averted because United States has to arm twist every western nation to pump a lot of money to prop the murderous regime they are backing. You have only to see how much Australia, Austria, Canada, EU, Uk, US etc have to donate just in this year. What amazes me is why is no one reporting on where the funding, so far given to Ethiopia (more than $25Billion) since the current government came into power is ending.Not to mention the $12 Billion ear marked to be given for the year 2008-2011 How come more arid places like Sudan and Eritrea are coping much better with out hardly any Aid ?



According to HRH Ethiopia gets at least $2billion with no accountability

http://hrw.org/english/docs/2008/06/12/ethiop19029.htm



http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/04/08/news/arms.php



http://www.arabnews.com/?page=6&section=0&article=112524&d=7&m=8&y=2008



http://www.africanews.com/site/list_messages/12869

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/5016834.stm

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Ethiopia Watch | October 5, 2008 1:07 AM | Reply

Dear Rob, I hope this finds you well. Sorry I've lifted yet another of your posts (and Simon's comment here above) but I fear that any links to your great posts may, within a few years, end up leading to blank 'not found' pages. Hope you don't mind. Best, Ingrid.



October 04, 2008 -

Ethiopian Famine Averted - “That might be what they say, but is it true?”

http://ethiopiawatch.blogspot.com/2008/10/ethiopian-famine-averted-that-might-be.html

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P.S. Re these excerpts taken from link here below, I wonder why in one report the UN says 4 million Ethiopians need food aid while in another report, around the same time, it says the number is 6 million?



October 03, 2008 -

"4 million Ethiopians are now estimated to need food assistance" (UN):

UN health agency calls for extra $8 million to help aid operations in Ethiopia.



October 01, 2008 -

"In Ethiopia alone, more than 6 million people need emergency food aid due to the failure of this year’s harvest, triggered by yet another drought. The situation has been exacerbated by both skyrocketing food prices, which have shot up 500 per cent in some parts of the country since last year, and conflict, which has thwarted the largely pastoralist population from selling their animals and purchasing food." - (UN)



http://ethiopiawatch.blogspot.com/2008/10/4-million-ethiopians-are-now-estimated.html

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Anonymous | October 6, 2008 9:23 AM | Reply

No worries Ingrid. Incidentally most of my NGO pals have been telling me Goal has jumped the gun on this and that there remain substantial problems. They have also been telling me they weren't billing the problems as a looming famine.

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Blake Evans-Pritchard | October 6, 2008 3:40 PM | Reply

Can't help but agree with the observation that too many journalists seem to spend all their time cow-towing to the powerful NGO lobby rather than making their own investigations. After all, it's easier for them if everything is given to them on a plate, then to spend hours putting together their own research.

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Anonymous | October 6, 2008 5:20 PM | Reply

What, you mean like swallowing the Sudanese govt propaganda about Chadian ID cards and uniforms found in Omdurman?

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Danny | October 8, 2008 4:01 PM | Reply

I think we should be careful about bandying about terms like "crying wolf" and journalists "cow-towing to the powerful NGO lobby. Ultimately people's lives are at stake here so be careful what king of agenda you drive. Just spoke to a v experienced and reliable humanitarian worker who has just returned from Ethiopia. He says the situation there is worse than it has been in years and, more worryingly, the government is doing its best to downplay the situation - which is having a major impact on response. Eg the govt delayed by four months the release of recent UN report which highlights the situation. Maybe you should be following this line of enquiry.

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Andrew | October 9, 2008 6:29 AM | Reply

I can remember a UN press trip to look at a drought in Ethiopia's southern nations region. The rain poured down throughout the trip. Lots of people managed to write around all the wetness.

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Anonymous | October 9, 2008 7:31 AM | Reply

During the Kenyan "famine" two and a bit years ago, I wrote a harrowing piece about the struggles facing nomads as their cattle died all around them. I filed my copy - essentially a road trip through the dry north-east - only to get a phone call from my editor saying:

"Er Rob, nice piece, but you have a line here saying 11 people have died. Sort of undermines the general tone don't you think. Shall we take it out?"

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Danny | October 10, 2008 9:48 AM | Reply

He obviously had no interest then on the long term impact on people's livelihoods? Would make our dreaded credit crunch look like a walk in the park.

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Anonymous | October 16, 2008 11:59 AM | Reply

A lot of people in Ethiopia need emergency aid. FACT. But that don't make it a famine

What do you think?