Jan Kellett
Jan Kellett was born in Northern Ireland and brought up in Wales. He has just completed eight years with the United Nations, working in Kosovo, Afghanistan, Iraq, Indian Kashmir, Macedonia, Bangladesh, South Sudan, almost always post-conflict or post-disaster, the long days waiting behind checkpoints on the way to Belfast airport finally proving an invaluable lesson in patience and reminding him always to pack the travel scrabble. The last three years were spent almost exclusively on coordination of the U.N. itself post-crisis.
Humanitarian money - it's not just about the cash
Author: Jan Kellett
Jan Kellett is programme leader of the Global Humanitarian Assistance Programme Humanitarian intervention is not only about the amount of money; it's also about how and where it is spent. Every choice made - to which country and through which organisation, by which mechanism, to which sector of life - has an impact, not only in-country but also well beyond the individual intervention itself. The Global Humanitarian Report of 2009, by mapping out trends in humanitarian financing, illuminates the sum-total of these choices. ...
Author: Jan Kellett
Jan Kellett is programme leader of the Global Humanitarian Assistance Programme Humanitarian intervention is not only about the amount of money; it's also about how and where it is spent. Every choice made - to which country and through which organisation, by which mechanism, to which sector of life - has an impact, not only in-country but also well beyond the individual intervention itself. The Global Humanitarian Report of 2009, by mapping out trends in humanitarian financing, illuminates the sum-total of these choices. ...
ICC warrant for Bashir means more deaths in Darfur
Author: Jan Kellett
This is a blog in three parts (click for part one and part two). Here's the final instalment.
In October 2006, hundreds of displaced Darfuris - a stream of tattered humanity - started arriving in the far west of Raja Country in South Sudan. Burned out of their villages in the western uplands of South Darfur, they had endured persistent assaults, food and water shortages, and family members giving birth or dying of old age along the way. All this to reach the relative comforts of the South.
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Author: Jan Kellett
This is a blog in three parts (click for part one and part two). Here's the final instalment.
In October 2006, hundreds of displaced Darfuris - a stream of tattered humanity - started arriving in the far west of Raja Country in South Sudan. Burned out of their villages in the western uplands of South Darfur, they had endured persistent assaults, food and water shortages, and family members giving birth or dying of old age along the way. All this to reach the relative comforts of the South.
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Darfur: A humanitarian compromise too far?
Author: Jan Kellett
This is a blog in three parts. Here's the second. Read the first part here.
Aid groups make tough trade-offs to save lives
Compromise is a core element of humanitarian response, almost as fundamental as values like independence, neutrality and humanity. Saving lives means making trade-offs.
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Author: Jan Kellett
This is a blog in three parts. Here's the second. Read the first part here.
Aid groups make tough trade-offs to save lives
Compromise is a core element of humanitarian response, almost as fundamental as values like independence, neutrality and humanity. Saving lives means making trade-offs.
...
Darfur: A humanitarian compromise too far?
Author: Jan Kellett
This is a blog in three parts. Here's the first.
See evil, hear evil, speak no evil
A few years ago, in South Sudan, there was a conversation between United Nations staff about the possibility of being thrown out of the country. It wasn't about how terrible that might be, how it would bring an abrupt and violent end to work in progress, but rather how wonderful.
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Author: Jan Kellett
This is a blog in three parts. Here's the first.
See evil, hear evil, speak no evil
A few years ago, in South Sudan, there was a conversation between United Nations staff about the possibility of being thrown out of the country. It wasn't about how terrible that might be, how it would bring an abrupt and violent end to work in progress, but rather how wonderful.
...
Life without George W: Enter Globama
Author: Jan Kellett
This is Part Two of a look at how the change in U.S. administration will impact global humanitarian issues. See Life without George W: Humanitarian wars.
So far, U.S. President Barack Obama has said, and repeatedly said, all the right things. Even though he is a politician, many have taken him at his word. I guess this is what they call hope.
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Next entries
Author: Jan Kellett
This is Part Two of a look at how the change in U.S. administration will impact global humanitarian issues. See Life without George W: Humanitarian wars.
So far, U.S. President Barack Obama has said, and repeatedly said, all the right things. Even though he is a politician, many have taken him at his word. I guess this is what they call hope.
...





