Aid organisations must speak out when sleeping children are killed in air strikes | Shadi Khan Saif

The silence from NGOs in Afghanistan makes me question if humanitarianism has become just a market-driven industry

When I was covering the bloody conflict in Afghanistan as a journalist, the most credible first-hand knowledge on the ground often came from the local frontline humanitarian workers, but I seldom saw their powerful organisations call a spade a spade about what the warring factions dubbed “collateral damage”.

That made me question the whole humanitarian world. Is it comprised of silent rescue and relief entities with no interest or responsibility for holding the perpetrators accountable for the many heinous crimes?

Continue reading…

This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.