Knowledge Hub
Fuel to the fire: Will Covid-19 drive global conflict?
Amid calls for a global ceasefire during the Covid-19 outbreak, Concern's Humanitarian Policy Advisor Dom Hunt discusses the impact of the epidemic on conflict and whether it could fuel increased violence
Last week, Secretary-General of the United Nations António Guterres called for a global ceasefire so that humanity could collectively address the Covid-19 pandemic. He did this because he realises, like we do, that the outbreak could exacerbate existing divisions, or contribute to creating new conflicts.
Conflict is the single biggest driver of humanitarian crisis today. Insecurity seriously hampers effective humanitarian responses, including to the Covid-19 pandemic, which will cost additional lives.
The pandemic is already having a significant impact on the global economy, and it may yet devastate an already weakened global economy - causing increased unemployment, decreasing consumption, and collapsing supply chains. A serious global economic recession lasting well beyond the immediate impacts of the virus looks inevitable.
Rising tensions
The people who will be disproportionately impacted economically by isolation or lockdown strategies are, inevitably, the poor.
Those who live precariously will be increasingly unlikely to make ends meet. In countries without social security systems, this can be catastrophic. Of this group, the urban poor are probably the most vulnerable, as they are more reliant on a cash economy than the rural poor. Additionally, in many urban areas and refugee/displacement camps, social distancing is largely impossible. With water, soap and healthcare in short supply, the rate of transmission may be very high and many health systems will be inadequate to meet the surge in need.
There is a lot of fear and panic surrounding the Covid-19 pandemic and, in many areas of the world where conditions are insecure and precarious, this pressure is adding to an already existing burden of fear and stress. As poor people try to circumvent isolation measures, enforcement may become stricter, leading to civil disorder – as has been seen recently in a number of countries.
Too little; too late; too strict. In many cases, the Covid-19 outbreak has seen the military back on the streets; fines and beatings; accusations of politicians taking advantage of the situation for their own political gains and frustration at the erosion of public services and safety nets by years of austerity measures.
Disasters create ideal conditions to drive through unpopular policies, such as austerity measures and restricted human rights. Having extended control measures under the guise of controlling Covid-19, some governments may not be willing to fully relax them afterwards. A violent reaction to these outcomes may not have happened yet, but it probably will. One only needs to look at recent uprisings in Chile, Haiti, Iraq, Lebanon and Sudan, among many, to see how the poor and marginalised masses might react.
Will this fuel conflict?
Urban areas are often strongholds for the opposition and gangs and as a result, popular uprisings normally start here. Large numbers of frightened, urbanised and vulnerable people, connected through social media, can mobilise against oppression very rapidly, or can be manipulated by politicians for their own ends.
Closed borders can also be sites of unrest as has been seen between Kenya and Ethiopia. Isolationist and nationalist politics can pit nation states against each other, especially as some leaders engage in racialising the virus.
A rise in conflict resulting from the economic and political impacts of Covid-19 is highly likely.
In countries already dealing with past or present conflict, or where there is a high potential for conflict (which is true of most of the countries in which Concern works), the government’s ability to manage public health crises is already compromised. As was seen in DRC during the recent Ebola crisis, conflict makes the management of epidemics significantly more dangerous and challenging.
Inevitably, humanitarian needs will increase as a result of Covid-19, but funding to the humanitarian sector may well go down at the same time. Before the pandemic was declared, humanitarian funding only covered about 50% of proposed life-saving programmes in conflict contexts. Compensatory budget measures may well divert money from overseas humanitarian aid into domestic responses; and existing humanitarian aid budgets may also be re-assigned to Covid-19 responses, away from other critical, life-saving work that will become more important in the coming weeks and months. This cannot happen.
Coming together
We are only as strong as the weakest health system. Therefore if we are to make progress towards achieving the Sustainable Development Goals, the global recovery must be more inclusive and we must recover better than efforts made the 2008 financial crisis.
Conflict drivers need to be addressed by all as a matter of urgency. The building blocks for the revitalisation of the global economy must be put in place by national and international leadership as soon as possible, targeted towards the extreme poor in countries already dealing with conflict dynamics. For those donor countries facing inwards and trying to address the pandemic within their own countries, there is a simple message: collapsing economies and conflict in other countries will inevitably affect us all.
Now is the time, more than ever, for the global community to come together, and not to isolate or only think about domestic priorities. At the very least, all countries should step up to the Secretary-General’s call for a global ceasefire, especially in places like Syria and Yemen, and contribute to the UN’s initial $2 billion appeal to address the humanitarian consequences of the Covid-19 pandemic.
Take a stand
To this end, we are backing the #globalceasefire campaign, an initiative of more than 190 NGOs and civil society actors supporting the General-Secretary's call for every country to put their differences aside and collectively address the Covid-19 pandemic.
You can find out more and sign the petition below.
Our impact in 2023
people reached, in 26 of the world's poorest countries
people supported in 66 emergencies
people reached through our health and nutrition programmes