Red Cross seeks permission to work in IS territory

Red Cross seeks permission to work in IS territory
The International Committee of the Red Cross attempts to establish relations with the Islamic State group in hopes of delivering aid to the millions of people living under its control.
3 min read
06 December, 2015
The humanitarian organisation wants to work in close proximity with those who need help [Getty]

The International Committee of the Red Cross [ICRC] has said it is trying to establish relations with the Islamic State group in hopes of delivering aid to the millions of people living under its control.

"We have a very clear humanitarian vision. First, what we see is 10 million people. Ten million people under the control of the Islamic State group (in Iraq and Syria)," ICRC Director-General, Yves Daccord, told AFP.

"We are interested in these 10 million people. What happens to them? What are their problems? This is what will guide us," he said.

     What we see is 10 million people. Ten million people under the control of the Islamic State group. We are interested in these 10 million people
- Yves Daccord, ICRC

The comments were made ahead of an agency conference in Geneva, held every four years, which gathers some 2,000 ICRC employees and national Red Cross/Red Crescent staffers for talks on the challenges facing humanitarian workers in increasingly complex environments.

The emergence of armed groups which at times disregard the need for life-saving aid is one of the threats facing the ICRC and groups like it, Daccord said.

Organisations seeking to help civilians engulfed by conflict will increasingly need to connect with such groups, regardless of their ideology, he added.

"My sense is, most of the international organisations will have to possibly rethink about how they operate in these areas, otherwise they won't be in a position to (work)," he said.

Building trust 'takes time'


The ultimate goal is "to work in close proximity" with those who need help, and to do that, you have to "talk to everybody," he explained.

"You cannot just come from Geneva" and expect armed groups to let you operate.

"You don't build acceptance from Boko Haram or any armed group in Syria in one day. It takes a lot of time and you have to have the right people."

Daccord said it took several years of outreach to Boko Haram before the ICRC was able to work in the extremist group's northeast Nigeria strongholds.

Though perhaps less high-profile than IS, Boko Haram's atrocities are unrivalled, including the repeated use of children as suicide bombers and multiple massacres and abductions targeting students.

"An actor like the ICRC, what we have to do is we really have to be absolutely, deeply humanitarian. No social agenda, no change agenda... You might have an opinion, but that's not the problem," Daccord further said.

To operate in Boko Haram or IS areas, an organisation must be seen as totally "non-partisan," he said.

Aid workers increasingly threatened

From airstrikes on hospitals, to kidnappings targeting aid workers, the ICRC has warned of the shrinking space for relief agencies in conflict.

Senior humanitarian leaders have also decried the waning respect for international humanitarian law, including the Geneva Conventions.

Wars have become "more atrocious in the human suffering they create," ICRC President Peter Maurer said in a statement ahead of the conference.

Daccord said it was difficult to compare the current era to past periods in terms of threats facing aid workers.

But he said that in Syria, devastated by a four-year civil war, the Red Cross has suffered unprecedented losses, with 49 volunteers from the Syrian Red Crescent killed.

"We've never seen that in our recent history," Daccord said.

Red Cross workers are also being held hostage in Syria and Yemen, where several other members of the organisation have also been killed.

Daccord also pointed to what he termed a clear rise in the number of health workers and health facilities targeted in conflict as further evidence of the narrowing humanitarian space in war.

"Imagine the world in which we will operate if we have no space for people to be treated," Daccord said, listing attacks on healthcare as a key subject for next week's conference.