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In Response to Images of Emaciated African Children

I noticed a number of images of emaciated African children with no contextual information in the photo evidence uploads. The history of these photos is very complicated, and unfortunately the emotional response they provoked in the West did not have the intended impact on the ground.

Many of photos are from the Ethiopian Famine of 1984, setting the tone for how Africa would be represented to the outside world for decades to come. Here in Ethiopia, most people I talk to can't stand those images and are embarrassed by them. It has taken the West a long time to catch up with the unintended consequences of such photographs, but good research and writings are now available.

- Imaging Famine is a website that catalogs research on representations of famine in the media.

- Robert D. Kaplan's book Surrender or Starve details the politics facilitating the 1984 famine and foreign reporters' failure to get the story right.

- The BBC just did a radio program yesterday on what happened to the aid collected thanks in part to such photos. I've copied the transcript of the program below.


My Request
In the spirit of the EVOKE Power of Local Insight, please make the effort to understand the historical, political, and social context informing the images we use here. Images are powerful, and we need to be responsible for that power.



Images of the famine in Ethiopia moved millions of people around the world to reach in to their pockets and donate to international aid efforts. But as Martin Plaut has been discovering, there is a disturbing allegation few would choose to confront.


A woman with her baby waits for food and medical care
Roughly one million Ethiopians died from results of famine
It was the early 1980s. The famine, which would soon devastate much of northern Ethiopia, was already evident. I had gone on the long, difficult journey through Sudan and into Eritrea with rebels who had been fighting the government for more than 20 years. My wife, Gill, had come with me. As a nurse she was fascinated by the way the rebels were treating their injured, carrying out difficult operations in makeshift wards dug into the mountains. But now it was time for me to go up to the frontline and for her to go home. It was late at night, and I remember wondering to myself what I would say
to her mother if anything went wrong as Gill got into one of the aid lorries rumbling their way back to Sudan. Sitting in a bunker, I had no idea where we were in this vast, arid landscape. I was entirely reliant on the rebels who had brought us in.


Live Aid



Live Aid concert
Live Aid concerts raised more than $60m (£40m)
For years the rains had failed and by 1984 millions were starving. Thanks in no small part to the help of Bob Geldof and Live Aid, people responded as never before. Millions of dollars were raised. Food was brought in. Many died, but the worst was averted - or so I thought. But a year ago, I began hearing a different take. I was contacted by Ethiopians who said we had all missed the real story of how money given

with such worthy objectives had ended up being used to buy weapons. I began making enquiries.


Gun money

Aregawi Berhe is the former army commander of the rebel movement that operated in the Ethiopian province of Tigray.


He now lives in a modest flat in the back streets of a Dutch town. He insisted on making me coffee. Then he told me his version of what took place all those years ago - how the lightly-armed rebels he led took on the mighty Ethiopian army which had all the latest Soviet weaponry. He told me that as the money began flowing in to feed the starving, a bitter debate had taken place inside the rebel movement. There were divisions over how the cash should be spent. He also explained how the aid money was diverted not just to buy weapons his troops needed, but also to build a hardline, Stalinist party - the Marxist Leninist League of Tigray. This initiative, he said, was led by a young ideologue, Meles Zenawi. In the bitter infighting, Aregawi and his allies lost out. Money that was being channelled through the rebel side went to the party and to buy guns. In 1985, Aregawi told me, just 5% of $100m (£65m) they received went to the starving. It was an extraordinary tale, but perhaps Aregawi and his associates were just embittered men, trying to blacken the names of their former comrades? After all, Meles Zenawi went on to become Ethiopia's prime minister and served with distinction on the Commission for Africa set up by former British prime minister Tony Blair.




A child victim of famine
The civil war in Ethiopia caused food shortages and exacerbated the famine
Secret CIA reports
So over the next months I spoke to people from Alaska to Australia, from Scandinavia to Palestine. I acc**ulated evidence from secret CIA reports. Former ambassadors
supported the story Aregawi had told me. Facts were found in the dusty back issues of obscure newsletters. Even former Ethiopian government officials, who had been on the government side of the conflict said they believed it was true. Was it significant that so many people refused to speak about these events, including civil servants, academics and politicians like Meles Zenawi? Even Bob Geldof, who is not usually reluctant to talk, turned me down. It became clear that 25 years on, this was still a subject too sensitive to be discussed openly.


Money trail

One person who did talk to me was Max Peberdy.
He is an aid consultant, who had carried nearly $500,000 (£331,00) worth in local currency into Tigray to buy surplus grain to feed the starving. Despite telling him the evidence I had collected, he insists the money did not go astray. I pointed out that he had been entirely reliant on the rebels to take him in, and that their Marxist-Leninist ideology ran counter to every
notion of an independent aid operation.


Gebremedhin Araya and Max Peberdy
Max Peberdy (R) with a merchant who now says he was in fact a rebel
I also explained that he had been unable to monitor the distribution of aid in the Ethiopian highlands that were the scenes of the most intense fighting. As I left his London home I thought back to when I waved goodbye to Gill with an Eritrean fighter by my side. I thought about just how isolated I had been - entirely dependent on the rebels who had taken me in. And how I had failed to ask the right questions at the time. Although I was now finally following the trail of the money and the rebel guns, I am only too aware that I wasmaking these enquiries 20 years too late. The aid workers who did so much to help those suffering back then had not asked those questions either. But perhaps they would not have saved so many lives if they had.

Views: 21

Comment by Ken Eklund on March 5, 2010 at 11:46pm
THANK YOU Ida for saying this so directly and eloquently, and for marshaling such an impressive array of facts to back up what you are saying. The power for ma**** of people to rise above media manipulation, and to find themselves their own crowdsourced truth, is a key part of the EVOKE Network!
Comment by Calida DeBello on March 5, 2010 at 11:52pm
An excellent example of the best of EVOKE. +50 RESOURCEFULNESS from Alchemy!
Comment by Nick Heyming on March 5, 2010 at 11:59pm
Thanks for pointing this out. Lack of context plagues idealists, its important to know who and why...
Comment by Nathaniel Fruchter on March 6, 2010 at 1:10am
You deserve it—+25 courage and +25 knowledge share.
Comment by Lucas Lee on March 6, 2010 at 4:45am
This blog deserves multiple power ups!
Thankfully this is featured, so hopefully more people read this.
Comment by Amos Meeks on March 6, 2010 at 4:49pm
This is an excellent post. Thank you so much for this.
Comment by Caroline Meeks on March 7, 2010 at 4:07am
Thank you, we don't hear enough about good intentions going wrong. We can't learn from these stories if we don't hear them.
Comment by Ida on March 8, 2010 at 7:14am
Thanks everyone. I'm glad you appreciate the evidence upload. This is a topic I'm passionate about.

If you're interested in more, things are heating up over the BBC's reporting on the topic. Many of the agencies that the BBC implicated in its reporting are filing formal complains. Here's an articles about it from 2 days ago: http://www.independent.co.uk/news/media/tv-radio/bbc-under-fire-for...

I think there's more info on it here, too: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/theeditors/2010/03/ethiopia.html. I can't read this article presumably because of Ethiopia's internet filtering.
Comment by David Dewane on March 20, 2010 at 3:58pm
Incredible story. Thanks for sharing. Have you or will you publish your findings elsewhere?
Comment by Ida on March 28, 2010 at 2:44pm
Hi David, Pardon my egregiously late reply to your comment. As for Ethiopia's famine images, lots of good research has been done, as I've highlighted. I'm working with a youth film collective here that has as one of its goals to counter the damaging effect of such imagery. I will produce a case study of their work should the rest of my time in Ethiopia goes well. Is this what you are asking about when you reference my findings?

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