Tag Archives: Martina Liebsch

Trafficking in Latin America

V Conference of Latin America and the Caribbean of WUCWO (World Union of Catholic Women Organisations) from 8 – 12 April 2013

By Martina Liebsch, Caritas Internationalis Policy and Advocacy Director

You could hear a pin drop when during the above mentioned conference the audience was confronted with the magnitude of the phenomenon of trafficking in Latin America. The evidence was presented as a film done by youngsters who travelling throughout the continent collected evidence in bars, on the streets, interviewing victims of trafficking, often minors, and bar owners and pimps. A shocking evidence of a continent which is seen as a continent of joy and sharing. This was evident as well in the testimonies of those who are working with persons which are being exploited. Continue reading

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Let’s take the bread and share it

By Martina Liebsch, Caritas Internationalis Policy and Advocacy Director

I start with a loaf of bread: Our daily bread. We need to share it and more importantly provide people the seeds, knowledge and resources to grow it in an often hostile environment. At Mass following the opening day of the Future without Hunger Congress in Vienna, we were reminded by Cardinal Oscar Rodriguez that we should be bringing light to people. This light might be still small but if enough people share it, it will become bright. Continue reading

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World Food Day: Calling for action against hunger at FAO

By Martina Liebsch, Caritas Internationalis Policy Director

I listened to Didi Bridgewater, walked past Claudia Cardinale, stood next to Jeremy Irons, saw Carl Lewis and took the elevator with Carla Fracci. What do you want more for a day? But where is the connection to food?

All these celebrities are good-will ambassadors for the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO). They were calling for a greater commitment in the fight against hunger at a meeting to mark World Food Day today in Rome. Government representatives and NGO’s were gathered in the plenary hall at the FAO offices in Rome and along with the directors of FAO and the other UN food agencies WFP and IFAD.

The message from Pope Benedict XVI was delivered by Archbishop Luigi Travaglino, Permanent Observer of the Holy See to FAO: “Many of our brothers and sisters do not have daily bread. The freedom from the yoke of hunger is an integral part of the right to life, not always respected these days.” Continue reading

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No time to lose says East Africa crisis summit

Mrs. Farheya Ahmed, a refugee from Somalia, walked for weeks while pregnant to escape war and famine. Photo by Laura Sheahen/Catholic Relief Services

Caritas Internationalis Policy Director Martina Liebsch reports on a ministerial level meeting at the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) in Rome about the drought in the Horn of Africa.

The outgoing director of Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), Jacques Diouf had called the emergency meeting to address the food crisis in East Africa.

The country most affected is Somalia – everyone agreed – but the crisis affects also parts of Kenya, Ethiopia, Uganda and has a spillover effect as people from Somalia are forced to migrate in the search of food.

Josette Sheeran, Executive Director of the WFP was one of the speakers on the High Level Panel. She had just came back from a visit in Dadaab camp in Kenya, which she described as unacceptable. Many people reach the camp after walking six weeks in search of food. Women had to leave children who were almost dying for the sake of saving their others. She also pointed out that if action is not taken soon we might lose a generation as malnutrition heavily affects a child’s development.

The meeting was chaired by the French government as current G20 president and attended by representatives from key countries, such as Somalia, Ethiopia, Sudan, South Sudan, and major NGO’s.

The meeting was unusually emotional. Some of the speakers recalled the fact that not long ago in an FAO meeting in 2008 there was a commitment that there would never be a famine again. The director of IFAD, a UN funding agency for agriculture, said he was praying that this conference would produce results.

With a very emotional voice, the representative from Norway referred to the shock his country is in and then highlighted its commitment to help in this crisis. His prime minister has said in response to the recent bomb attack and shooting in Norway that it is imperative to work on more democracy and more humanity!

The facts around the crisis were put on the table by all the speakers on the panel:

  • A fierce drought over a vast territory
  • 11 million people affected, the most vulnerable being pastoralist communities, women and children
  • The increase of the food prices (per 200 percent  in Somalia and 70 percent in the past four months in Kenya)
  • Conflicts in the affected zones – 60 percent of the population of Somalia are not accessible
  • The movement of people in search of food
  • $1 billion for the year and so far only half of it is secured

Concerning the solutions there was a long list of good words.

Building peace was mentioned as a key duty and the responsibility of warring parties to allow access to the suffering population.

The French minister Bruno Le Maire said that the necessary financial support needs to be found at the latest at the donor meeting in two days time in Kenya.

The second element is the need to invest in agriculture, and not only at moments of emergencies, but in the long-term. Every developing country should have the right to secure its own food.

Concrete suggestions from the G20 group of developed and emerging countries would be to establish a reserve of emergency stocks, to invest in research and agricultural knowledge such as developing drought resistant seeds and work on irrigation (only 1 percent of the arable land in the Horn of Africa is irrigable).

After a lot of good words and appeals, Jeffrey Sachs, the economist and adviser to UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon, brought people back to reality. European Union countries and the U.S. are in no position to give financial aid, she said, and we must look to Persian Gulf nations.

He said that many participants had mentioned integral rural development, however only a few would really apply it in a way which would include looking not only at agriculture, but at health, education etc.

Finally he said, that climate science is incomplete, there needs to be more investment into more thorough information. There is the assumption that the rain patterns which usually affected Somalia have moved to the Indian Ocean, due to the global warming of the Earth. More of such information is needed in order for people to adapt to new situations.

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Responsibility of protecting lives has no borders!

By Martina Liebsch, Advocacy Director for Caritas Internationalis

I feel ashamed! While I was very worried about the agenda of our Caritas General Assembly, 72 people were clinging on a boat hoping for a better life. While a helicopter pilot turned back to his base, people on the boat in the Mediterranean Sea were starting to have hope. While I was enjoying a nice dinner at home, they were starving on a boat. While a captain on a ship was having a drink with his colleagues on the ship, people on the boat were thirsty. While I was thinking of my son, children did not have a reply from their mother as she died on the boat, from hunger, thirst and exhaustion. While I was enjoying a nice sunset and hours of rest with my husband, they were ending their life without peace and hope. And they have almost no voice.
It has happened before, that people have died in the Mediterranean Sea, while attempting to cross to Italy.

Thousands are reported. But, it happened very close to us, in a stretch of Mediterranean where freedom seems to be a stone’s throw away from the suffering either as migrant or refugee in Libya. This happened in spite of our advanced world, where everything seems to be possible. It has happened in spite of potential rescuers being in touch with the drifting boat.

Libya is bombed by highly developed planes in the name of freedom. But are we not able to rescue people who try to flee from the very same situation? It happened because everyone is worried about his or her own mandate and responsibilities, but not about moral courage. It happened because states are worried about protecting borders and not about protecting lives. It happened because of a system where responsibilities are moved from one state to the other, without clear commitment and policies.

The measures taken to face migrants coming from the Southern Mediterranean countries in crisis have not really been taken in coordination and solidarity. Every country took its own decision, leaving migrants in limbo. It will become a full circle we have seen before, when these migrants start to get noticed because they might have committed some crime in order to survive.

However, many documents in the EU speak about values, such as solidarity and rights. The European Charter on Fundamental Rights of the EU in article 2 says, “Everyone has the right to life”. This right has been trampled down.

But there was a bit of consolation too! This morning a colleague called me asking if we had reacted on this specific situation. And while justifying why I had not been able to react, I realized that something – even very small – should be done!

This is why I love the Caritas network. It is not just one pair of eyes, but many more of them! We will meet at our GA in 10 days and we are worried about statutes, rules, and meetings. Without diminishing the importance of this important event of Caritas, my colleague helped me to put the priorities right. Our network is there to speak out for the voiceless, the right less, the excluded and those who just want a little piece of better life.

Nine out of 72 people on the boat survived 16 days on the sea without rescue in spite of the fact that there were contacts to potential rescuers! Otherwise we would not have even known about it. Is that the humanity we want to live and see?

Let’s not be afraid and get our priorities right!

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Filed under Female Face of Migration, Migration and Trafficking