The Bridge with Peter Mansbridge - On The Road in South Sudan With Samantha Nutt
Episode Date: January 30, 2024A special edition today as we ask Dr Samantha Nutt of War Child Canada to break down her most recent trip to South Sudan, basically to take us with her. So get your maps ready because this will bring... you into the heart of one of the most challenging places on earth -- thousands of dead, millions of displaced .. many facing civil war and starvation.
Transcript
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And hello there, Peter Mansbridge here. You are just moments away from the latest episode of The
Bridge, and today's Bridge is a special edition. We're going on the road with one of Canada's best
known aid workers, Dr. Samantha Nutt of War Child Canada. This is a special edition of The Bridge. And hello there, Peter Mansbridge here.
As I said, today's a special edition of The Bridge,
on the road with Dr. Sam Nutt of War Child Canada.
I'm going to try and break down what actually happens on how these people,
and Dr. Nutt is just one of many aid workers in Canada,
but she's special to the bridge.
She's been on the program many times.
But we want to try and understand the situation
of how you get in a country like South Sudan.
How do you actually do it?
And we've got to start off with, you know,
I would advise people to have a map.
Just Google South Sudan.
Map South Sudan.
Have that handy.
Or map Northeast Africa.
Have that handy so we can place where we're going on this little trip.
You'll know what we're talking about. I remember when I used to be at the National, many of us had this same concern
that we would talk about a place in the world, we'd throw up a map,
and the map would be a cutout of the particular country.
But you'd have no real sense looking at that map.
Okay, but where is it?
I see the shape of that country, but where is it? You know, I see the shape of that country,
but where is that country in relation to that part of the world it's in?
And so that's what we want to do here, first of all, is where is it?
How do you get there?
What do you go through getting there?
And then when you're there, what happens?
So we're going to talk to Samantha about that. We're going to break it down into
its most simplest form. Why are we doing Sudan? Well, we've heard over the last couple of years
with our focus on Ukraine and Russia and Israel and Hamas, Yemen, you name it,
that in fact the place in the world where the worst situation is, is in Sudan, in northeast
Africa. But does the world care? Well, we're going to do our part in trying to at least establish what's happening there, where it is, who's involved, why we should care.
So I hope you listen through on this,
because these people, like Dr. Nutt,
are incredible in what they do.
So while you're getting your map ready,
let me remind you that the question of the week this week is,
if you could tell a new immigrant to Canada
one thing about Canada, what would that be? We've already got a lot of entries into this since it
was announced yesterday. So don't be shy. Send yours in to the Mansbridge podcast at gmail.com,
the Mansbridge podcast at gmail.com. And most of the entries so far are obeying the guidelines that we established.
Keep it short.
Include your name and the location you're writing from.
The keep it short part is important if we're going to get as many of these in as possible on Thursday during your turn. The one deemed the best entry will receive a signed copy of one of my books
and look forward to sending that out to somebody later this week.
So deadline, 6.30 tomorrow night.
Okay, 6.30 Eastern Time Wednesday.
Get your entry in, please.
All right, let's get around to our conversation now
with Dr. Samantha Nutt of War Child Canada. This topic,
on the road with Sam to South Sudan. Here we go.
So listen, what I've done already is I've asked our audience to have a map in front of them.
Because, you know, most of us don't know these places you go to, and we couldn't find them on a map.
You know, you saw a map of Africa with no names on it and said, point to South Sudan.
People go, right.
Yeah, okay.
Well, it's somewhere in there.
So first of all, how do you get there?
Like what is the route you go to get into somewhere like South Sudan?
Well, it's tricky.
I mean, first of all, even just getting the visas to be allowed to travel is very, very complicated.
You essentially have to, for us, we're a registered humanitarian organization,
so you have to provide a lot of documentation. You send it down to what is vaguely an embassy
in Washington with your passport and a return envelope, and you hope that that's going to get
processed at some point. But I will say that leading into the holidays in December, I was a
little concerned that I wasn't going to get my passport back in time. It just disappears into
an abyss, but I did.
So once you go through that process, then in terms of travel,
I went from Toronto to Heathrow, and then Heathrow to Addis Ababa in Ethiopia.
And keep in mind, there are long layovers in between
and lots of uncertainty around flights.
And then you go from Addis into Juba, which is the capital of South Sudan.
Is that a flight, Addis to Juba?
That's Ethiopian Airlines flies there.
And, well, it certainly flies there now.
That hasn't always been the case.
And then from there, you have to, again, overnight in Juba,
and you have to take special United Nations humanitarian flights
that effectively only humanitarian organizations and their staff are allowed to take that you then would take the next day or the day after.
And that takes you into these very remote locations.
And sometimes those planes are reasonably big, 24 seaters, that kind of thing. Plus, and then sometimes I've been on planes that are tiny six-seater World Food Program planes, and you're landing in a strip in the middle of the desert where
they actually have someone employed to clear the goats off the runway. And sometimes you have to
do a few passes to make sure that there's nothing in your way before you land, which was certainly
the experience in places like Somalia. So getting around internally when roads are insecure
or just non-existent with giant holes in the middle of them
and that kind of thing, the only way you can really travel is by flying.
And the only way you can fly is on these specialty humanitarian flights.
Okay, let me back you up just a sec.
You're in Addis.
You've flown into Addis from London.
And is there any issue about flying from Addis to Juba? Like, do you have to have special, do you have to show your visa?
Are there border checks or what's involved in that? All of that. So you have to make sure before
you're even allowed on the plane that you can demonstrate that you have your visa for South
Sudan. Sometimes if you're stopping in Ethiopia that you have your visa for South Sudan.
Sometimes if you're stopping in Ethiopia, you need a visa for Ethiopia as well.
And then, of course, keep in mind, Peter, when you land in places like South Sudan at the airport,
you don't know what you're going to get.
You have to have not just your visa.
You have to have letters of invitation that have been approved by different members of different governmental departments.
You have to have your humanitarian registration. You have to have your humanitarian registration.
You have to have your identification card.
So there's on top of your actual visa, there are probably half a dozen to a dozen pieces of paper that you have to produce every time you fly,
including permissions from the United Nations flight operators and all this kind of stuff. And if any one of those pieces of paper has something that even looks remotely like what it's not supposed to be,
an incomplete stamp or an incomplete signature or anything along those lines,
then that can be an invitation for you to be stuck there for a very long period of time trying to negotiate access because people are
destitute and desperate and government public sector workers are not paid very much and so
they'll exploit any opportunity that they can to try to generate some extra revenues and so you
have to be very very patient because obviously when you're part of the humanitarian sector you
will never pay any kind of incentive to be allowed access to enter. So sometimes it's a game of chicken and you're hot and you're tired and you're exhausted
and you're hungry and they know that. And it's a bit of a production. It's not easy. It's not easy.
Juba then is the capital of South Sudan. It's in the kind of southern end of the country. You're heading north eventually on one of those UN flights,
but you may have to spend a day or two or more in Juba.
Is Juba a civilized modern city?
It's not bad by the standards of a country that's been at war for 30 plus years.
So, you know, they have, certainly if you stay at a locally run hotel, they'll have running water.
You can easily get meals.
The security situation in Juba, though, can be touch and go.
And particularly in 2016, 2017, they've had some armed insurrections.
There's an election taking place later this year,
so I anticipate that the violence will accelerate again,
at least in Cuba.
You just don't know.
It's a powder keg.
And so at any point in time,
someone can do something to one of the armed groups
or within the political power-sharing arrangement that they have.
It can hit a point of disagreement and then suddenly things are difficult.
But when we arrived, our local team made it very clear that because of the holidays,
having just concluded, because again, this is January when we left,
because the holidays had just concluded that they had reinforced the sort of security
perimeter around Juba because they had been anticipating that there would be some military
activity. So we were very, very glad that we didn't see any of that.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but there had been great hope that South Sudan was going to be
the future for places like that in Northeast Africa. But then things went wrong.
What happened?
It was a series of things,
but the original leader, John Garang,
who emerged from the separation of Sudan and South Sudan
and the peace process, he died in a helicopter crash.
And after that, that created a bit of a power vacuum.
And there's been a lot of jockeying for position between the different tribal leaders ever since.
And so it is a country where there are oil resources and oil revenues, has been very, very complicated.
And then on top of that, you have standards of education and a public service that is not as strong in health, education, academia, or even business development, economic development, as it should be.
And so as a result of that, you have a number of different tensions that are playing out. academia as it or even business development economic development as it should be and so
as a result of that you have a number of different tensions that are playing out ethnic tribal
economic educational gender-based that can uh create this this ongoing insecurity and and and
ongoing attacks between one group one group and the other, so you're in Juba in southern South Sudan,
and you're heading to northern South Sudan on a UN flight.
Now, are those who control movement within South Sudan okay with you being there,
or are they helpful to you being there?
Do they understand why you being there? Or are they helpful to you being there? Do they understand why you're there? What is the issue, or is there an issue between you and the
governing forces in South Sudan? No, I think, look, you need to consult with local government.
You need to make them aware of what you're doing. We've been operational in South Sudan and Sudan and other parts of Africa,
certainly in war-torn countries, for more than 20 years. And so we have strong relationships.
We have a fantastic local team. 99.9% of our staff everywhere in the world are local. Our
country director, Emmanuel, in South Sudan is Southern Sudanese. And so that helps in the sense that we follow their
lead. They manage a lot of these relationships. They engage the government in conversation.
And they recognize that the work that we're producing is having an outcome, a very positive
outcome for communities. So for example, in some cases, if I'm going into a community where we have
been doing food security work with women,
teaching them how to farm, teaching them how to preserve their food, to provide for their children, to get income from those activities,
sometimes we'll have a government representative who will come, who will even introduce the organization to the community,
and we'll talk to them about the work that we're doing so you it's not the case
there where you feel as if government is hostile to your intentions they're very much welcoming
those intentions where where the tensions come is that their priorities may not be your priorities
they may not even be the population's priorities because they may have um strategic reasons and
votes they're trying to earn and this kind of
thing for telling you where you should go and what you should do and that's where you end up in
places of tension that require a lot of patience and a lot of diplomacy.
So up to this point when you're you get on the plane to head north, you still feel safe?
You're safe at that point?
You're not under some threat?
I mean, Peter, I'm the wrong one to ask.
Safety is a relative term.
I mean, compared to Yemen, yeah, I felt really safe
because in South Sudan, they're not kidnapping aid workers or in Iraq or in Afghanistan.
And being a woman in those environments, running an organization in South Sudan is a lot easier than it is in Afghanistan, for example.
I can meet with officials and have conversations and there isn't this overlying
tension that exists. So yeah, I feel
as safe as possible under the circumstances.
Okay. So you're on the UN flight. You're flying
into the north of the country where your
concerns are helping those who are living there.
What's the situation as you get off the plane?
It's not like you're landing at Pearson.
You're landing on probably some airstrip in the middle of nowhere.
You are, and it depends.
So I was in two different locations along the Sudanese border for this particular trip,
and one of those locations called WAU, W-A-U, if your listeners do have their map out,
that is relatively safe and secure.
There have been some armed incursions in different locations.
There's a strong UN peacekeeping presence.
And so in that situation, going out to visit our programs,
especially because they're in agriculture in that location,
they're in very remote spots, an hour to an hour and a half,
sometimes two hours on really hard, bumpy, challenging roads.
I certainly felt there as if it was, there was significant progress compared to
what I had seen previously. Things have been relatively stable. People are farming. We're
seeing the effects of climate change and that kind of thing, but we're not seeing a lot of
armed violence and destruction. Having said that, when I was on the opposite side in Malakal,
again, close to the Sudanese border,
the last time I had been there,
that was a functioning city for 50,000 plus people
with a thriving industry and people had jobs
and there were markets and this kind of thing.
And landing there, it was unrecognizable to me.
There is nothing left of that town.
They have gone through a significant amount of upheaval over the last five, six years.
They had some armed, really intense fighting in the camps for internally displaced people there. About eight months ago, they've received more than 100,000 returnees from Sudan
and refugees from Sudan as a result of that war.
So you've got a mass migration of people living in the most abhorrent conditions that you can imagine.
You have an underfunded humanitarian, drastically underfunded humanitarian response.
You've got a town that's been completely flattened.
And it is dystopian and heartbreaking on a level
that I think is inconceivable for most,
certainly Canadians, to even imagine.
Were you, I mean, obviously you'd been briefed, you had some sense of what you were getting into,
but you sound like even you were surprised by what you saw.
I was surprised by what I saw.
I knew that there had been fighting in Malakal from the time that I had been there previously
but I didn't expect it to just be
rubble
and squalor
and open sewers everywhere
and a level of destitution
that I have not seen in many parts
of the world, partly because under normal
circumstances, when you have this mass migration of refugees and returnees because of the war,
for example, in Sudan, and South Sudan has accepted about half a million refugees and
returnees from Sudan in the last, just in the last nine months, which is a massive number of people.
And so normally what you see are makeshift shelters,
and you see tents, UNHCR tents,
and you see plastic sheeting and corrugated metal siding,
and people have started to erect temporary structures.
But in this case, because, again,
the humanitarian response has been so constrained,
largely as a result of a lack of
attention, conflict in Ukraine and Gaza, sucking up a lot of those resources. Keep in mind that
South Sudan and Sudan, the humanitarian response, the global humanitarian response for both of these
crises is less than half of what is required of the global humanitarian appeals. And so everything is in short supply.
And so you don't see those food distributions.
You don't see those tents being set up.
You see a lot of people just living out in the open in tents on plastic sheets,
being moved around the country all over the place
to try to accommodate them in different locations.
And they are arriving incredibly desperate, starving.
If you're women and girls having experienced mass atrocities, terrific sexual violence.
And there are very few services available to them.
And that is among the worst I've seen in almost 30 years.
I mean, it is on a level I haven't witnessed since Somalia.
It was heartbreaking.
Who's in control?
I mean, is the government of South Sudan in control?
Is it the UN who's trying to control things?
I mean, you talked about UN protecting aid groups.
Who's in control?
This is always the question in any war zone.
Is anyone really in control?
If anyone was in control, would it still be at war, right?
If the peacekeeping forces were able to really enforce peace,
you wouldn't have a situation like this. So in a place like Malacal, it is a negotiation all the time between the humanitarian actors
like the United Nations and UNAMIS, which is the United Nations mission in South Sudan,
the peacekeeping mission, and then local government as well.
And sometimes those priorities are they don't they don't align so for example
the government may not want those returnees who had fled south sudan to go to sudan previously
and now are coming back and some of them are from different tribal groups they may have had
different military political uh affiliations which is why they fled in the first instance
and now they're coming across.
And then you have Sudanese who are coming across into one of the poorest countries in
the world.
Four fifths of the population of South Sudan lives in extreme poverty.
So the government is trying to deal with these arrivals who are extremely vulnerable, who
may also represent a threat to peace and stability for their own country
and trying to figure out where to put them and how to contain them.
And yet these are groups that also have tension between themselves.
And so some of those groups don't want to be put together
because they feel that it makes them, they're locked in then and at risk from one another.
And so then the UN is trying to figure out it's like a it's like a massive
jigsaw puzzle right or chess board where you're trying to figure out who's going to go where and
where it's safe and where you can provide services and and what makes sense and uh and sometimes that
doesn't work which is why um last summer there was a a major uprising in one of the camps and
a number of people were slaughtered
and several thousand of them fled to a different location.
And now the government's trying to relocate them.
And to do that,
they're cutting off services.
So people are becoming more destitute and more desperate.
It's,
um,
it's very complicated.
There are many layers to it.
So you're there now you're with your team and you're trying to help. So what do you do?
Well, in places where it's stable and we have a presence that's very straightforward. So this is
a country that is at tremendously high risk of famine. And the answer there is not short-term
food distribution programs that will work again again, in the short term.
But when you have an underfunded humanitarian response, and when the World Food Program's budget has been slashed,
and so they're not able to provide ongoing regular sources of food, you have to look at other means.
And so that's why we have been doing work in the area of food security, actually funded by Global Affairs Canada called the FEED program, which we do in conjunction with
CARE and World Vision here in Canada, and a terrific program. So we're providing seeds and
tools and training around farming and they're harvesting their own food and that's providing
revenue and stability for families and allowing those communities to recover.
At the same time, we're doing catch-up learning for kids who've been out of school and they're able to get back into school and to envision a different future for themselves other than amongst those armed groups. So in those environments, that's been very successful.
In places like Malakal, where we have also been operating, again, we're within the camps.
We're looking at child protection work,
women and girls, education pieces.
What becomes challenging is what to do with the new arrivals
because it's an ongoing tension.
You've got a government that wants to send them
to specific locations that they don't want to go to.
And the government, because they don't want them to remain,
they don't want international humanitarian organizations directly providing services to them
because then they will not move, they will not stay, they'll stay to continue with those services.
And so then this is a negotiation.
So you've got these different clusters of humanitarian organizations
grouped around themes, education, nutrition, child protection.
And as a group, we try to negotiate with the government
to be able to provide services to those who are most at need,
or most in need, rather.
But it's difficult because the things that you know need to be done
and that you want to do
you can't just go ahead and do them because then you risk being kicked out of the country you risk
being offside of the entire humanitarian effort there because you're providing services to a group
that you're told needs to move um even though those same recipients are sitting there digging in their heels saying
there's absolutely no way we're moving because if we move it will be killed so this is the kind of
delicate situation that we confront and i guess the short answer to your question is we do as
much as possible under the circumstances, recognizing that there can be unintended consequences
and you have to be able to look ahead
and understand what the impact of those efforts will be
and make sure that you negotiate
both with the broader humanitarian community
and the government,
as well as those people who are in incredible need to find the best path forward.
And sometimes it's incredibly frustrating.
I want to take a short break.
I've got a couple more questions on this.
I really appreciate you talking to us about it and
trying to place us there because that's the hardest thing about stories like this is for those of us
who live comfortable lives on the same planet but in a different space. It's awfully hard to
understand that. Be back right after this.
And welcome back.
You're listening to the Tuesday episode of The Bridge.
Dr. Samantha Nett from War Child Canada is with us,
talking about her recent trip just back a couple of days ago from South Sudan.
And, you know, as you said, it's a war zone that you're in.
And I'm, did you ever, you know, obviously, I mean, I've seen some of the pictures you took and the video you took,
and it certainly looks like a war zone and the aftermath of, you know,
a terrible displacement of people and buildings and etc.
Did you ever get caught in what you thought was a war zone?
On this trip?
Yeah.
You're in it. When you're in Malakal, you're in it.
I was staying at the United Nations peacekeeping mission. So I'm surrounded by 250 soldiers. I was one of maybe maximum three women that I saw in the entire camp. Um, and, uh, I was 60 feet from where the UN helicopters are all taking off and the
troops are doing all of their drills and you stay in a tiny shipping container. Um, so you, you,
you, you really feel it. You really, you really do feel it. It's, uh, it's a place where things
can turn on a dime. And, and I've been in those kinds of UN mission spots before, multiple times actually.
But yeah, there's no question when you're in that situation that you're actively in a war zone.
And then, of course, every day you hear from people and you hear their stories. And then you're reminded of just how terrifying and horrific war is
and how it's just destroying so many millions of lives throughout the world.
And people never fully recover from that.
They just put time and space between what they've endured and where they are
now. Can you share one of those stories that you heard from this most recent trip?
Yeah, I think, well, there were a couple actually. The hardest part, the hardest moment for me
certainly was going into, we've been active in the Darfur region for 20 years now of Sudan.
And last summer, our staff were in hiding.
They were from, some of them were from the ethnic minority that was being targeted during that conflict, which is still ongoing.
Many of them have had to flee.
Some have fled into South Sudan the Central African Republic
up into Egypt
and it was a very very tense and difficult
time we've been in West Darfur, Aljanina
like as I said for a very long time
doing youth programming
and education so there I am
just not even
actually a week ago tomorrow
and
I go I'm trying to go to the location of the darfurian
refugees who have arrived and there are several hundred of them and so we're directed towards this
bombed out almost completely destroyed mosque in the center of malakal. And they're camped out in the
gardens,
in the mosque itself.
It's dark.
The conditions are horrific.
They're really struggling.
They don't even have any kind of
tents or
anything at all.
And so we're met by these several
hundred Darfurian refugees.
And this one, after some introductions and explanations,
this one young woman stands up and she says,
she starts explaining how she had just written her final medical school exams.
And she's from El Janina in Darfur and she doesn't
even know what the results were because she had to flee and so she was never able to receive them
and all those records have now disappeared and as a doctor myself I can just imagine all that time
and effort and energy and you write your final exams and then you're left with no proof that you did any of it.
And she stands there and she's, you know, it's clear that she has a very high level of education to have gone that far.
And then she says that she remembers Wartel Canada and she remembers our team in El Janino
because she'd been part of our youth leadership program. And she was so happy and so grateful for that.
And then she said that she had arrived with absolutely nothing.
She had to leave her family behind because she couldn't even get home to flee
with them.
She was with another young woman whose baby she had delivered at the side of
the road who fled with her, who was pregnant.
And they had been through horrific things absolutely horrific
things and at the end of the conversation she was having she turned and I mean it was
it was hard she turned and she said um
we've been waiting for you we knew you would come come. And I was with my all-African team, and they just started crying,
because they were refugees at one point as well.
And all of the refugees, when she said that and they translated,
they stood up and they started applauding.
And her story is incredible. And what makes it so
heartbreaking as well is that in my head, I hear this from her and I know that they're starving.
I know that they haven't eaten in weeks. And I also know that that is a deliberate policy
because they don't want those Darfurian refugees to stay there.
They want to relocate them to Maban, which is the recognized refugee camp, which many of them had come from.
But they had fled because they were part of the same Darfurian minority group that was being slaughtered in in janina so so this is a group of people who are
being told we're not going to provide you with services because you're not allowed to stay here
and they're saying to us we're not going to that camp because we'll be raped and we'll be killed
and we we know this we've experienced this and then they're looking at you to say we waited for you to come
and the the the weight of that and the expectations around that are um are the things that keep me up
at night there it's enormous it's it's enormous and there are no easy answers we we did some
short-term stuff while we were there to provide them with support and to make sure that they had at least enough food for the foreseeable
future. And we're trying to negotiate with some of the other organizations on the ground and to
get them relocated to perhaps different refugee camps where they would be safe. But there's no
long-term solution there other than hopefully the peace process in Sudan will eventually be effective
and they'll be able to go home.
But most of them have no homes to return to,
and they don't even know if their loved ones are alive.
So it's hard. It's hard.
I bet.
Not only is it hard, but it must be awfully hard or difficult to square it in your mind.
You know, we've known each other for quite a few years.
And, you know, where I see you, it's in, you know, southern Ontario or somewhere in Canada.
And we live a good life and we're very lucky.
And, you know, we have all the benefits of uh of being canadian
and living in canada and then suddenly within literally i guess that's why i wanted to hear
the story about how you got there because it's literally within a matter of hours you're
you're in another you're in a very different place a very dark place uh on the other side
of the world but it's still the same world. And somehow you've got to square all this in your mind,
and I'm not sure how you do that.
I think that it comes from experience for sure.
But I also think that what drives you in the end is seeing progress.
So in the same way that Malakal was challenging
and devastating and difficult
and these solutions seem to be elusive,
not that far away where we've had other programming
going on for a while.
And some of those Darfurian refugees
would like to go to WOW.
And so that's the kind of thing that we can help expedite
and try to figure
out um we've had longer term programming where people are turning their lives around and their
kids are able to go to school and they're thinking very differently about the future they're not
holding on to the scars of the past and getting people to that place i mean that's really what
war child does right it's it's it right? It's that bridge between dependence and independence, between hopelessness and hopefulness.
And so by investing in that and seeing that progress, that's what makes it all worthwhile.
And that's the stuff that I try to hold on to.
One of the other things that another young woman said from Darfur when I was talking
to them in that mosque, she turned around and she said, those who wage war come to kill
us, and those who are indifferent to our suffering want to destroy us.
And that's what it is right it's it's if we can whatever little bit we can do
to restore people's sense of of dignity and and the space to recover and to rebuild
that's when you transition from this place of chronic conflict to something that actually
will lead us all to more peaceful societies. It's just, unfortunately, we invest too heavily
in the arms and war side of that equation. And we invest, by comparison, so little,
less than one twelfth of global military spending is spent on humanitarian aid. I mean,
by comparison, humanitarian aid is one twelfth of global military spending is spent on humanitarian aid. I mean, by comparison, you know, humanitarian aid is one twelfth of global military spending.
Getting that balance right would actually promote a more peaceful world.
It's just, it's a longer term strategy.
And we tend to think in very short term ways around these challenges.
What's the right balance?
Is it one for one?
I got to be honest.
When you said one-twelfth, I was surprised.
It's that high.
Yeah.
Well, you know, these days with everything that's been going on in Ukraine and Gaza,
it might be far less than that, especially with a lot of the cutbacks that are taking place.
Look, it doesn't cost a lot.
It doesn't cost a lot to educate a child.
It doesn't cost a lot to provide clean water and access to food.
These kinds of things are pennies, dollars,
compared to what we spend on our vast armaments throughout the world,
our weapons of mass destruction.
And you can certainly argue around the need for a fulsome defense budget in order to promote global peace and security.
And I don't want to get into all that stuff right now.
But what I would say is that we look at aid as something that is wasteful.
It's usually the one thing people think that they can just dispense with if they're trying to cut
budgets. It always seems to be like, why would we send our money to other parts of the world?
And what good does it do? And we have enough problems here at home. And that's the kind of
stuff that we hear all the time, the stuff that I've heard for 30 years. But the reality is that when you're facing a global refugee and displacement crisis, 110 plus million people, the worst since World War II,
when you see all of these crises popping up all over the place, and you need to recognize the
interconnected nature of these outcomes. And so by investing in the humanitarian piece, it actually invests in all of our peace and security. And so as much as humanitarian aid, we like to position it as being wasted or unnecessary or not something that is relevant to us.
We would see it as completely the opposite.
Okay. We're almost out of time.
You did mention earlier Yemen, because that's often on your mind, having been there yourself and dealt with some difficult situations there.
If our listeners are still looking at a map,
it's all in the same orbit here.
I mean, Yemen is not that far from South Sudan,
sort of across Ethiopia, across the Red Sea,
across the Gulf of Aden.
It's right there.
And it's in the news in a way it hasn't been before
as a result of the Houthi attacks on shipping
and their involvement really as part of the whole Israel-Hamas thing.
Have you given Yemen much thought as a result of everything,
your own background there and what you're witnessing now?
And if you do, give us your thoughts before we close this out for today.
Yeah.
Well,
you and I have talked about Yemen a lot over the last year because I've been
there three times,
including twice to the Houthi control areas just in the last 11 months.
And I was there two months ago.
I was in the Southern part of the country.
So it's,
it's always on my mind. We have programming in Yemen.
And look, the reality is it's an extremely vulnerable country.
The Houthis are seeing, for them, the incentive around participating in Gaza is that they are effectively a proxy for Iran and are supported by Iran,
both militarily and financially.
And so for them to do Iran's bidding in the Red Sea, which keep in mind with the Red Sea
as well, that 12% of global trade and about 30% of all shipping global container traffic,
30% of global container traffic goes through the Red Sea there. So even
though we don't think about Yemen, when the Houthis decide to flex militarily like this,
the impact on the world and the world economy is pretty significant. So this is really about
them trying to curry favor with Iran. They've had their own political instabilities. They've
been at war for almost a decade about
377 000 people have died in that conflict they're out of money they the houthis can't even pay their
public sector workers they're not paying their teachers or their or their uh or their police
and they've had trouble even paying their own military so this appeals to them for domestic
reasons it gives them a level of of credibility within the region it gives them a level of of credibility within the region
it gives them a level of of power the extent to which they represent a meaningful threat to
world militaries like the united states or the united kingdom not really but what it does
represent in terms of drawing all of these other actors into a broader regional
conflict. And we saw some of that today as well with, with, uh, Iran affiliated attacks on, uh,
U S soldiers in Jordan of all places, right? Um, previously we'd seen that in Iraq and we'd seen
it in Syria, but in, but in Jordan, which is a strong U SS. ally, this is where just by creating friction, uncertainty, disruption, blocking the movement of goods and this kind with, for example, the United States,
because that would be a point of no return. So when I think about Yemen, this is what I think
of. I think of a population that is starving, that is broke, that is in desperate need of
humanitarian assistance. And now on top of it, they are pawns in this broader geopolitical game
between various powers to try to achieve an advantage
that is unclear at this moment.
Dr. Samantha Nutt, Warchild Canada.
Sam, thanks very much. We're all glad you're home.
We know that you'll be going back because that's what you care about.
And, you know, obviously you care about things here as well,
but we know that that's your, your mission in life,
working on these kinds of things. And we're proud to know you. So take care.
Thank you. And thanks for having me again. I'm sorry. I'm always depressing.
I don't mean to be, but it just always works out that way.
Well, that laugh makes us feel better.
Take care.
Thanks.
Take care.
Dr. Samantha Nutt from War Child Canada.
With an inside look of what it's like to go on one of these journeys,
to help, to aid.
Now, Dr. Nutt mentioned a number of other Canadian-based aid groups that are involved
in work in Sudan and South Sudan.
If you feel so, you know, they all take donations.
They all need your help. And if you want to go to Sam's organization, it's warchild.ca,
and you can find out everything you need to know there.
All right, a quick reminder, tomorrow is Wednesday.
It's an encore day, and we're going to look at the Canadian secrets by going back into the podcast library to a program we did almost a year ago that talks about how we gather secrets, Canada that is, what we do with them, and how protected they are.
So that's all coming up tomorrow on a encore edition.
Thursday is your turn, and the question of the week,
you want to get your potential answer in here,
or your answer to the question of the week,
which is, if there's one thing you could tell a new immigrant to Canada
about Canada, what would that be?
Keep it short.
Include your name and location.
Get it in before 6 p.m. tomorrow, Eastern Time.
All right, that's it for this day.
Once again, thanks to Dr. Samantha Nutt and all the good people at Warchild Canada.
I'm Peter Mansbridge. Thanks so much for listening.
Talk to you again.
In the encore version in 24 hours.