Connect with us

Global Issues

No Inclusion, No Justice: Humanitarianism’s Complicity in Systemic Inequality -By Fransiscus Nanga Roka

Humanitarianism must face this complicity if is going to retain any moral authority. Commitment on inclusion cannot merely be rhetorical. It has to be a non-negotiable standard, reinforced through contractual duties, timelines measured by performance indicators and real consequences that follow from failing. Data disaggregation, meaningful participation and conditional funding on inclusion.

Published

on

Workers of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) agency talk together in the playground of an UNRWA-run school that has been converted into a shelter for displaced Palestinians in Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip on October 25, 2023, amid the ongoing battles between Israel and the Palestinian group Hamas. (Photo by Mahmud HAMS / AFP)

Humanitarianism has a nice, comforting story it likes to tell itself about how neutral and noble its motivations are how much of an indiscriminate shield for everyone everywhere humanitarian actors can be. However, for millions of people especially disabled persons below the poverty line that story starts to crumble once crisis hits. The reality, a much crueler and uncomfortable one: an always-excluding system clearly does not work at all. It is complicit.

Let’s be clear. Exclucion is not a problem of logistics in humanitarian response It is a structural outcome. When shelters are constructed without accessibility; when emergency information never comes in multiple formats; when evacuation plans do not make accommodation for mobility and cognitive diversity these things are no fault of anybody. These aren’t technical gaps, they are in fact policy choices.

The language of “constraints” scarce resources, narrow delivery windows and the exigencies of getting things done is familiar to humanitarian actors However, that does not explain why the same groups continue to be left behind. Patterns do. And that trend is a pattern, and not just some incidental circumstance: those at the bottom are an afterthought if they’re even regarded as such.

International law is not silent on that. The Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) prescribes unambiguous obligations from States to protect and ensure safety for persons with disabilities in situations of risk, emergency or humanitarian setting. But in practice, we often see these responsibilities watered down into voluntary principles, soft commitments and optional checklists. Rights become recommendations. Accountability becomes negotiable.

It is here that the contradiction of humanitarianism lays itself bare. It tries to have its cake (moral high ground) and eat it too by preventing legal accountability. It appeals to what is human, but it works through hierarchies of visibility and value. The easily counted and the easily photographed are those who become aid. People who need structural adaptation such as people with disabilities are kept silent.

Advertisement

And, it is not just the moral: The problem here lies in its political. Funding priorities shape humanitarian systems, and funding follows visibility. Without the demands to measure, and without securing an overall impetus behind disability inclusion on a continuous basis, nothing will be funded. And if it is not funded, it does NOT happen. That is not neglect that is by design.

Current humanitarian reform efforts could even risk exacerbating the problem. The drive towards efficiency, case management and cost-cutting sounds modern but can put exclusion on permanent record without enforceable protections. If that is efficiency, but justice free, it is just a quicker way of expulsion. Without inclusion, localizing can end up just replicating the existing discrimination at a more localized level. Reform, in this context, is more an act of branding than a change agent.

Most alarming of all is how familiar this exclusion has become. They are referred to as a “gap”, a possible “challenge,” an issue of `capacity. These are technocratic expressions that conceal a more simple truth: systemic inequality is being replicated with the justification of humanitarian assistance. Exclusion stops being a failure when it is predictable, committed over and over again but tolerated. It becomes a function.

The ramifications are not abstract. They are counted in bodies abandoned to ignore, ambitions lost without a say and rights quashed at impunity. Not because the crises are inherently unequal, but because responses are: civilians with disabilities face disproportionate risks in conflict zones, disaster areas and refugee camps.

Humanitarianism must face this complicity if is going to retain any moral authority. Commitment on inclusion cannot merely be rhetorical. It has to be a non-negotiable standard, reinforced through contractual duties, timelines measured by performance indicators and real consequences that follow from failing. Data disaggregation, meaningful participation and conditional funding on inclusion.

Advertisement

This is not about being kinder to the system. It is about making it just.

For a system that preserves some lives while willfully neglecting others is not human. It is selective. And selectivity, when it becomes institutionalized, is indistinguishable from injustice.

No inclusion, no justice. It is not a gap to be mended; it is something that needs revealing.

Fransiscus Nanga Roka

Faculty of Law University 17 August 1945 Surabaya Indonesia

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Trending Contents

Topical Issues

Major General Rabe Abubakar killed by Fulani herds Major General Rabe Abubakar killed by Fulani herds
Forgotten Dairies8 hours ago

When a General Dies in Captivity, Who Is Really Safe? -By Usman Muhammad Salihu

Yet beyond the anger and sorrow lies a challenge. Nigeria must decide whether such incidents will continue to be treated...

Tunji Disu Tunji Disu
Forgotten Dairies8 hours ago

IGP Tunji Disu’s Intelligence-Led Policing Is Delivering Results Across Nigeria -By Kelvin Adegbenga

For these reasons, IGP Tunji Disu deserves commendation for his leadership, commitment to operational excellence, and determination to build a...

Adams Oshiomhole Adams Oshiomhole
Forgotten Dairies9 hours ago

Should Senator Adams Oshiomhole Be Suspended? A Legal Examination Of Equality, Privilege, And Legislative Conduct -By Jacob Shekwobashawye Samuel

Consequently, the demand for equal treatment must be based on equal circumstances. The principle of equality before the law does...

Forgotten Dairies9 hours ago

Beyond “Tinubu Must Go”: The Need for Policy-Based Politics -By Abdullahi Abubakar

Nigeria’s challenges are too significant to be addressed through political emotions alone. The nation needs serious conversations about economic recovery,...

law law
Breaking News9 hours ago

Atiku, Mark, Adeleke Challenge Court-Ordered Deregistration of ADC, Accord, Others

ADC and Accord leaders vow to remain on the ballot after a Federal High Court directed INEC to deregister five...

June 12 Democracy Day June 12 Democracy Day
Forgotten Dairies13 hours ago

Democracy Day: A Clarion Call To Both The Rulers And The Ruled -By Ibraheem Iyanoluwa Jelili

As we celebrate Democracy Day and remember the sacrifices of our lives Heroes, a pertinent question arises for those currently...

Tinubu Tinubu
Forgotten Dairies13 hours ago

Tinubu’s Second-Term Bid: The Height Of Inconsideration -By Isaac Asabor

In the final analysis, Tinubu’s second-term bid epitomizes inconsideration. It trivializes the suffering of Nigerians, disregards the failures of governance,...

Celebrity on social media Celebrity on social media
National Issues13 hours ago

Likes, Shares And Consequences: How Social Media Promotes Peace And Fuels Conflict -By Faith Ogbotor

His view highlights the positive role social media can play in fostering dialogue and building connections across communities. From raising...

Social Media Social Media
Forgotten Dairies13 hours ago

The Danger Of Acceptance: How The Issues We Normalize Are Breaking Us -By Faith Ogbotor

Social media has also introduced problems that many now accept as normal. The search for attention, online insults, comparison, and...

Oriowo Olalekan Ridwan-Nofiu Oriowo Olalekan Ridwan-Nofiu
Forgotten Dairies20 hours ago

Facts Over Labels: Debunking the Stranger Narrative in Ogun Politics -By Oriowo Olalekan Ridwan-Nofiu

Without muddying the waters, it is clear that Ladi Adebutu’s polling unit change from Iperu in Remo to Odogbolu, the...