#29 - JRL 9313 - JRL Home
From: Robert Bruce Ware (rware@siue.edu)
Subject: Reply to MSF (JRL 9312)
Date: Tue, 6 Dec 2005
I appreciate the response from MSF Press Officer, Emma Bell, in JRL 9312, to
my criticisms of the North Caucasus operations of MSF and other NGOs, which
appeared in JRL 9304. Her response offers an opportunity to clarify some
important points, and I request that Ms. Bell and others at MSF should now
assist me in doing so.
First, my critique explicitly referred to “rights and relief organizations”.
I believe that it is fair to say that MSF is a medical relief organization.
Nevertheless, MSF has issued numerous statements over the years concerning human
rights in the North Caucasus, in contrast to other medical relief organizations,
such as the Red Cross for example. As Ms. Bell acknowledges, MSF has frequently
commented on human rights issues, and may be fairly said to have human rights
concerns.
Second, if MSF’s activities in the North Caucasus have been as impartial as
Ms. Bell claims, then why has it done so much to assist Chechen refugees, and so
little to help the 32,000 Dagestani refugees who were left homeless and almost
entirely unassisted following the incursions of Chechnya-based militants in
August and September 1999. Many of them remained homeless and in desperate need
for years after MSF returned to the region in 1999. It is striking that in her
message claiming impartiality, and proclaiming MSF’s concern for Chechen
refugees, Ms. Bell should not have even have mentioned the Dagestani refugees,
though their neglect was a focus of my critique.
Finally, I don’t think that any attentive JRL reader could possibly agree
with Ms. Bell that I have been “glib” in my characterization of the North
Caucasus hostage situation and the repercussions thereof. I think most JRL
readers are aware that my contributions have been very much to the contrary on
that point. But Ms. Bell’s concerns about this problem raise another issue that
she and her MSF colleagues should now clarify: Since Ms. Bell acknowledges that
the hostage industry drove MSF out of the North Caucasus, why has MSF done so
little, over the years, to explain that situation to the international
community, and to inform the public regarding the full extent of its horror? MSF
has appropriately issued numerous statements about human rights abuses committed
by Russian federal forces and their allies in the North Caucasus. Why has MSF
said so little regarding the human rights abuses of the hostage industry that
destroyed thousands of local people in the late 1990s, and to which the Russian
return to Chechnya was a partial response? Since MSF has said so much about
abuse on one side, and so little about abuse on the other, how can Ms. Bell, or
anyone else at MSF, hope to make a serious claim for impartiality?
I hope that this will be an opportunity for Ms. Bell and everyone else
involved in MSF’s North Caucasus operation to awaken themselves to what Ms. Bell
describes as the “neutrality and impartiality are enshrined in MSF's charter”. I
suspect that MSF has a fine charter, which has unfortunately failed to preserve
MSF from ideological bias and institutional hubris.
Though it was not a point that Ms. Bell considered, I also wish to reiterate
my earlier point that there are many fine NGOs doing important work in Russia. I
find it very unfortunate that the imbalanced efforts of groups like MSF, HRW,
and AI in the North Caucasus should now be contributing to difficulties for
other organizations throughout Russia.
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