Web seminar: “La salute sotto il fuoco: operatori sanitari nelle zone di conflitto”

 

L’Università di Harward Giovedì, Program on Humanitarian Policy and Conflict Research, organizza per giovedì 11 aprile 2013 un live web seminar sul tema “Health under fire: targeting medical workers in conflict zones”.
Il seminario affronterà il team della crescente vulnerabilità del personale sanitario nelle zone di conflitto, un dilemma che si sta configurando come una delle più serie sfide per le operazioni umanitarie oggi.
Per saperne di più e registrarsi: http://www.hpcrresearch.org/events 
         
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Since the adoption of the First Geneva Convention in 1864, international actors have recognized the Red Cross emblem as a symbol that identifies and protects health care personnel, hospitals, and medical equipment in times of armed conflict. However, over recent years, the political instrumentalization of humanitarian healthcare has eroded the inviolability of the symbolic value of this emblem, as well those of the Red Crescent and Red Crystal. This development has left medical workers increasingly vulnerable to attacks in conflict zones, a dilemma that has emerged as one of the most serious challenges to humanitarian operations today.
This situation has escalated in the past few months. In December 2012, gunmen allegedly from the Pakistani Taliban killed nine anti-polio workers, leading the United Nations to suspend the polio eradication program in the area. Two weeks later, on New Year’s Day 2013, seven community development workers in Pakistan were killed, also due to their association with anti-polio work. And most recently, on February 8, 2013, suspected members of the militant Islamist group, Boko Haram, killed nine healthcare workers in Nigeria.
The catalyst for much of this targeting of anti-polio healthcare workers was the CIA’s use in 2011 of a polio immunization program as a covert mechanism to gather intelligence about Osama bin Laden’s compound in Pakistan. The subsequent admission by the CIA of the strategic use of a public health initiative for espionage has led many to perceive healthcare initiatives as threats. For example, Taliban commanders — asserting that the immunization program is a cover for U.S. espionage — have banned anti-polio work and have justified killing health care workers in areas of Pakistan under Taliban control as legitimate measures to coerce the United States to end drone strikes in the country.
This Live Web Seminar will address a number of legal, political, and professional dilemmas that this situation presents and will consider the following questions:


– What is the scope of the protective functions of the Red Cross, Red Crescent, and Red Crystal emblems for health professionals under national and international humanitarian law?

– To what extent are humanitarians willing to tolerate risk and to what lengths will humanitarian agencies go to provide security and safety for medical staff?

– What strategies of humanitarian health diplomacy, and what potential operational steps, are likely to prove effective in ensuring that health care initiatives are perceived as independent, neutral, and impartial?

 
 

 

 
 
 
 
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