
In the past fifty years, our world has been ravaged by violent conflicts
that have claimed the lives of many millions of civilians and left tens of millions more permanently displaced. These civilians
have been expelled from their homes, and are often denied access to life-saving food, medicine and shelter. Grave violations
of international humanitarian and human rights law and blatant disrespect for the normative framework of humanity that has
emerged over the past 50 years is common to many of these conflicts. Civilians have become the primary target of attack motivated
by ethnic or religious hatred, political confrontation or simply ruthless pursuit of economic interests.
This stark picture has led the United Nations, the International Committee for the Red
Cross, regional organizations and many other international agencies increasingly to dedicate greater attention to protecting
civilians in ongoing armed conflicts. The United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan called for the establishment of a "culture
of protection" in his report of 30 March 2001 on the Protection of Civilians in Armed Conflict. "In such a culture,
Governments would live up to their responsibilities, armed groups would respect the recognized rules of international humanitarian
law, the private sector would be conscious of the impact of its engagement in crisis areas, and Member States and international
organizations would display the necessary commitment to ensure decisive and rapid action in the face of crisis. The establishment
of this culture will depend on the willingness of Member States not only to adopt some of the measures (outlined in the report)
but also to deal with the reality of armed groups and other non-state actors in conflicts, and the role of civil society in
moving from vulnerability to security and from war to peace."
On many occasions, the Secretary-General has emphasized that, "As human beings, we cannot be neutral, or at
least have no right to be, when other human beings are suffering. Each of us...must do what he or she can to help those in
need, even though it would be much safer and more comfortable to do nothing." In this spirit, humanitarian aid workers,
United Nations peacekeepers and many others struggle daily, to provide protection to those distressed by war. Humanitarian
personnel in particular, in many conflicts are at the forefront of this international effort, often without any military presence
available and in imminent danger of their lives.
The
UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), together with its humanitarian partners in the Inter-Agency
Standing Committee on the ground, advocate for the accommodation of needs and the rights of civilians, particularly children,
women, the elderly and other vulnerable groups. It strives to ensure that civilians everywhere will be afforded the basic
human dignity each individual deserves.
At the same
time international actors do not cease to remind States and their Governments of the fact that the primary responsibility
for the protection of civilians rests with them and that international efforts can only be complementary to Governments own
efforts in this respect. In the Millennium Declaration, the Member States of the organization therefore, pledged to "expand
and strengthen the protection of civilians in complex emergencies." Together we must move from words to deeds and
intention to implementation, in protecting civilians in armed conflict.