6.3 Some basic parameters
The manner in which conflict increases vulnerability and food
insecurity is varied and complex. It is difficult to separate the indirect from
the direct consequences of war in this respect, since the deliberate act of
destroying economic systems and infrastructure, together with the uprooting of
entire populations, has long-term effects and multiple ramifications, besides
immediate consequences. Deciding where to place a dividing line is difficult and
even misleading.
The destruction and dislocation of markets
The destruction of market centres and transport links is a high
priority in internal conflict. The Ethiopian government has frequently used
aerial bombardment to disrupt the economies of Eritrea and Tigray. In Angola and
Mozambique rebel attacks, exemplary terror, and the indiscriminate mining of
roads have been used to similar effects. The consequences of such disruption are
legion. In Eritrea and Tigray market activities, like agriculture, have to take
place at night. In South Sudan, Angola and Mozambique a barter economy has
emerged from the disintegration of the formal rural economy. The destruction of
markets greatly increases food insecurity in such areas.
Areas of conflict also disrupt the commercial and labour markets
adjoining them. People are disinclined to travel, and merchants stay away.
Trading and labour migration are important aspects of people's coping
strategies. If the insecurity is longterm, then the loss of income-earning
opportunities changes the socio-economics of an entire area. This in turn can
have numerous knock-on effects. In the case of Northern Uganda, for example, it
has been argued that 15 years of war have created the socioeconomic conditions
that favour the spread of AIDS. The decline of local markets means that most men
are unable to earn enough money to pay the extremely high bridewealth now
demanded. The result is growing numbers of informal marital arrangements, which
frequently break down. In addition, the impoverishment of families with AIDS
sufferers, through their declining ability to cultivate, has forced more and
more women into brewing and prostitution (Uganda, 5/89-6/90).
The destruction and dislocation of subsistence agriculture
Attempts to discourage or prevent opposing groups from
cultivating are common. The Ethiopian government has destroyed crops and herds
in Eritrea and Tigray. Cultivation now takes place at night. In Angola, UNITA
has indiscriminately mined wide areas of countryside. For this reason, Angola
has the highest incidence of mine-inflicted injuries in the world. It is also
food-insecure, and yet is potentially a rich and fertile country. In Mozambique
random attacks and exemplary terror by the MNR discourage cultivation. In South
Sudan, government soldiers have attempted to restrict cultivation in some
regions to areas surrounding government-held towns. Several examples have been
cited of the systematic looting and destruction of peasant/pastoralist assets.
Even in areas where insecurity may be less intense, farms are reluctant to
cultivate at any distance from their villages. In Western Sudan, peasants have
sold camels, a valuable transport animal, for fear of attracting raiding
parties. War and conflict depress the level of subsistence agriculture, and
reduce the asset-base in rural areas. Combined with the destruction and
dislocation of markets, vulnerability and food insecurity are greatly increased.
The dislocation of populations
The effect of war has been to create a massive problem of
refugees and internally displaced people. In Mozambique, there are over four
million internally displaced people, with a further 1.2 million living as
refugees in surrounding countries. Angola has 1.5 million displaced within its
own borders and 0.6 million refugees outside. In South Sudan, more than one
million people have been displaced internally ant to North Sudan, while a
similar number are living in neighbouring countries. Within a few months of the
outbreak of the recent fighting in Liberia, almost half of the country's total
population of 1.5 million had been displaced, a quarter of these as refugees in
West Africa These examples serve to show that the most visible consequence of
internal conflict is the massive displacement of people. Such populations are
extremely vulnerable, due to the loss of their livelihoods and assets. They are
also vulnerable to food denial and human rights abuse. The mandate of the UNHCR
does not cover the internally displaced. Even with regard to certified refugees,
however, the financial crisis currently facing the UNHCR means that it is not
always able to discharge its mandate effectively. The displaced and refugee
populations face further economic and social marginslisation through lost
opportunities for employment and educationactors which are recognised as
increasing their food insecurity.
The effects on the family
Internal war in Africa has had a devastating impact upon family,
generational and gender relations in Africa. Besides the dividing and
bereavement of families, war has magnified and greatly accentuated trends
already discernible as a result of enviroeconomic factors. The case of Uganda
mentioned above indicates how war can lead to new and unstable marital
relations. The extreme, but all too common, occurrence is the widespread rape
and abuse of women in conflict situations. The burdens and exposure of women,
already increasing, are greatly magnified by war. Generational changes are also
accentuated. The 'child soldiers' of Liberia, Uganda, Mozambique, and Angola are
another example of the extremes to which internal conflict is pushing African
family and social relations. The reappearance of slavery in Sudan and Mozambique
is also relevant here. The immensely traumatic effect of these events does not
appear to have attracted widespread attention.
The destruction and dislocation of social infrastructure
The destruction of schools, or the unwillingness of teachers to
work in insecure areas, mean the loss of education for children on a massive
scale. Education is an important strategy by which families attempt to escape
poverty. In Sudan, Uganda, Mozambique, and Angola entire generations of children
have reached adulthood with little or no formal eduction. For many, violence may
be the only future waiting for them.
Insecurity disrupts health services and reduces already low
levels of care at a time when growing vulnerability increases the risk of heath
crises. In some countries diseases such as malaria, for example, once believed
to be under control, have reestablished themselves in many areas. Conflict and
insecurity have curtailed veterinary and pest control services. Because the
threat of locusts, for example, crosses borders and battle lines, their control
in the Horn has been significantly weakened. In South Sudan, the collapse of
veterinary services has greatly added to the loss of cattle in the region. Such
services were never comprehensive, but their disruption certainly contributes to
pastoralists' vulnerability.
Contribution to economic decline
The overall effect of the destruction of infrastructure, the
loss of production, the multiple disruptions and the diversion of scarce
resources towards the purchase of arms has had a major and incalculable economic
impact on many African countries (Green, 1987). Outside perceptions of
insecurity and conflict have also been an important factor in the collapse of
foreign direct investment since the 1970s. Internal warfare must now be regarded
as an important factor promoting long-term economic
decline.