Alphen, Netherlands. 20
October. As EU foreign ministers finally meet to discuss the Ebola epidemic and
Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf makes a desperate open plea to the
world to get its act together the disease is taking hold. According to the World Health Organisation
(WHO) more than 4500 people have already died of Ebola in West Africa. Well in
excess of 9500 people are infected of whom 70% are expected to die. WHO estimates there could be as many as
10,000 new cases each week by early December.
Three actions are
desperately needed to stop Ebola spreading and then establishing itself as a
perennial disease. First, the provision
of effective preventative and curative healthcare is needed across West Africa
and indeed beyond. Second, a longer-term
strategy is needed to properly establish basic but robust healthcare systems. Third, an end is needed to the brain drain of
qualified West African medical practitioners to the West. Britain’s National Health Service is a major
recruiter from the region.
However, the control of
pandemics (which Ebola is not as yet) also needs the world to take a new approach.
Specifically, a Global Disaster Action Centre is needed for which healthcare
would be a major responsibility and which would act in a similar way to the US
Centers for Disease Control or CDC (even though the CDC has not covered itself
in glory of late). Such a Centre would
be ideally focused on the UN Security Council (UNSC) and supported by
military-style structures with a Situation Centre at its core that would
assimilate and interpret real time intelligence and analysis to provide support
for command decisions. Logistics would
need to be pre-positioned and provided by the five Permanent Members of the
UNSC and reinforced by other members of the G20 group of rich and emerging rich
states. Such a centre would act as
emergency reinforcement for national health professionals and help properly and
better co-ordinate the vital work of the non-governmental community.
All well and good but…Many
years ago when I was a callow youth in the salad days of my strategic evolution
my boss seconded me to the United Nations to design a ‘strategy’. This was probably because a) I kept asking
awkward questions of the powerful at home; and b) because whilst the UN of the
day was huge on “strategy” it viewed the word “action” as a crime against
bureaucracy and thus it was probably felt I could no harm. The good news was that I got to spend time at
the UN both in Geneva and New York.
One of the UN agencies
unfortunate enough to ‘benefit’ from my strategic guidance was WHO. At WHO I found a core of seasoned, brave and
dedicated medical field people surrounded by a strange assortment of
fellow-travellers. There were sons and
daughters of African and Asian potentates who may or may not turn up for work alongside
officials seconded from one Soviet bloc state or another of whom not a few had the
title ‘colonel’ or some other such military appellation. The former knew nothing about anything whilst
the latter knew nothing about health the ‘function’ of whom was not at all
‘clear’, if you know what I mean. With
the end of the Cold War I hoped things might have changed, now I wonder.
Last week an internal
WHO report was leaked cataloguing the egregious errors made by the UN in first
identifying and then containing the West African Ebola plague. This was not exactly a surprise to me and
suggests that within the UN bureaucracy personality and politics still remains
more important than strategy and action.
The plain fact is the UN and its agencies are simply not geared for
crisis management in spite of the many ‘offices’ that claim to be crisis
managers in some form or another.
Blame for the Ebola
failure cannot be laid solely at the many marble portals of the UN. As the predictably tardy EU response
demonstrates the somewhat misnomered ‘international community’ has been predictably
lamentable, fragmented, tardy and haphazard – too little, too late. As per usual it is not until the Americans
and the wider West take action that anything substantive happens, although it
is good to see China taking its international responsibilities ever more
seriously. Some 4000 US military
personnel are now engaged in Liberia.
The British are sending additional forces and resources to Sierra Leone
and the French likewise to Guinea whilst the EU is providing medevac.
Tragically, in a world
ever more connected and interdependent global crisis response is anything
but. So why does something like a Global
Disaster Action Centre not already exist?
There are three reasons. First,
the lack of trust in the UN Security Council between P5 members as the world
slides back towards echoes of the Cold War and the frictional geopolitics that paralyses
effect policy and strategy. Second, the
eternal donor gap in which UN members pledge support but rarely if ever deliver
it prevents the systematic application of forces and resources. Third, the complete lack of pledges from a
host of UN members for which Africa in particular remains the Dark Continent
little understood and even less cared about.
Over the past decade
there have been several immense natural disasters ranging from a 2006 tsunami
that is estimated to have killed at least 200,000 people to deadly typhoons and
hurricanes and now an outbreak of plague that in some African countries could
have the same population-scything effect as Europe’s fourteenth century Black
Death. Each time the world’s inadequate response
has turned a crisis into a disaster.
Therefore, the Ebola
crisis must be seen as a ‘wet-run’ for future crises – both human and natural. Prevention, engagement and consequence management
are the three pillars of effective crisis management. However, such structures, strictures and
sutures need to be worked up. This is
because effective crisis response requires government to government action,
individual governments to function effectively and rapidly from top to bottom
and civil society to play a full role through awareness, prudence and if needs
be engagement.
Last week the British
Government held a best-practice exercise which for the first time in many years
involved ministers. Too often in the past
ministers have excused themselves from such efforts and sent officials
instead. Consequently, crisis
preparedness was politically decapitated and not just in Britain. This high-level absence helps explain why
crisis response mechanisms have for so long lacked experienced, committed
political command and leadership.
As President
Johnson-Sirleaf writes: “The time for talking or theorising is over. Only concerted action will save my country,
and our neighbours, from experiencing another national tragedy. The words of Henrik Ibsen have never been
truer: “A thousand words leave not the same deep impression as does a single
deed””.
For the sake of
humanity here are my thousand words.
Julian Lindley-French
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