The
Nobel Peace Prize for 1999
The Nobel Lecture given by The Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
1999, Médecins Sans Frontières by James Orbinski (Oslo, December
10, 1999)

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Copyright © The Nobel Foundation, Stockholm, 1999.

Your Majesties, Your Royal Highness, Members of the Norwegian
Nobel Committee, Excellencies, Ladies and Gentlemen:
The people of Chechyna - and the people of Grozny - today
and for more than three months, are enduring indiscriminate
bombing by the Russian army. For them humanitarian assistance
is virtually unknown. It is the sick, the old and the infirm
who cannot escape Grozny. While the dignity of people in
crisis is so central to the honor you give today, what you
acknowledge in us is our particular response to it. I appeal
here today to his excellency the Ambassador of Russia and
through him, to President Yeltsin, to stop the bombing of
defenseless civilians in Chechnya. If conflicts and wars
are an affair of the state, violations of humanitarian law,
war crimes and crimes against humanity apply to all of us.
Let me say immediately that the extraordinary distinction
that the Nobel Committee has given Medecins Sans Frontières
is one that we accept with sincere gratitude, but also a
profound discomfort in knowing that the dignity of the excluded
is assaulted daily. These are the forgotten populations
in danger, like the street children who struggle each grinding
hour to live off the waste of those who are «included»
in the social and economic order. These too are the illegal
refugees that we work with in Europe, denied political status,
and afraid to seek health care, lest this contact leads
to their expulsion.
Our action is to help people in situations of crisis.
And ours is not a contented action. Bringing medical aid
to people in distress is an attempt to defend them against
what is aggressive to them as human beings. Humanitarian
action is more than simple generosity, simple charity. It
aims to build spaces of normalcy in the midst of what is
abnormal. More than offering material assistance, we aim
to enable individuals to regain their rights and dignity
as human beings. As an independent volunteer association,
we are committed to bringing direct medical aid to people
in need. But we act not in a vacuum, and we speak not into
the wind, but with a clear intent to assist, to provoke
change, or to reveal injustice. Our action and our voice
is an act of indignation, a refusal to accept an active
or passive assault on the other.
The honor you give us today could so easily go to so many
organizations, or worthy individuals, who struggle in their
own society. But clearly, you have made a choice to recognize
MSF. We began formally in 1971 as a group of French doctors
and journalists who decided to make themselves available
to assist. This meant sometimes a rejection of the practices
of states that directly assault the dignity of people. Silence
has long been confused with neutrality, and has been presented
as a necessary condition for humanitarian action. From its
beginning, MSF was created in opposition to this assumption.
We are not sure that words can always save lives, but we
know that silence can certainly kill. Over our 28 years
we have been - and are today - firmly and irrevocably committed
to this ethic of refusal. This is the proud genesis of our
identity, and today we struggle as an imperfect movement,
but strong in thousands of volunteers and national staff,
and with millions of donors who support both financially
and morally, the project that is MSF. This honor is shared
with all who in one way or another, have struggled and do
struggle every day to make live the fragile reality that
is MSF.
Humanitarianism occurs where the political has failed
or is in crisis. We act not to assume political responsibility,
but firstly to relieve the inhuman suffering of failure.
The act must be free of political influence, and the political
must recognize its responsibility to ensure that the humanitarian
can exist. Humanitarian action requires a framework in which
to act.
In conflict, this framework is international humanitarian
law. It establishes rights for victims and humanitarian
organisations and fixes the responsibility of states to
ensure respect of these rights and to sanction their violation
as war crimes. Today this framework is clearly dysfuntional.
Access to victims of conflict is often refused. Humanitarian
assistance is even used as a tool of war by belligerents.
And more seriously, we are seeing the militarisation of
humanitarian action by the international community.
In this dysfunction, we will speak out to push the political
to assume its inescapable responsibility. Humanitarianism
is not a tool to end war or to create peace. It is a citizens'
response to political failure. It is an immediate, short
term act that cannot erase the long term necessity of political
responsibility.
And ours is an ethic of refusal. It will not allow any
moral political failure or injustice to be sanitized or
cleansed of its meaning. The 1992 crimes against humanity
in Bosnia-Herzegovina. The 1994 genocide in Rwanda. The
1997 massacres in Zaire. The 1999 actual attacks on civilians
in Chechyna. These cannot be masked by terms like «Complex
Humanitarian Emergency», or «Internal Security
Crisis». Or by any other such euphemism - as though
they are some random, politically undetermined event. Language
is determinant. It frames the problem and defines response,
rights and therefore responsibilities. It defines whether
a medical or humanitarian response is adequate. And it defines
whether a political response is inadequate. No one calls
a rape a complex gynecologic emergency. A rape is a rape,
just as a genocide is a genocide. And both are a crime.
For MSF, this is the humanitarian act: to seek to relieve
suffering, to seek to restore autonomy, to witness to the
truth of injustice, and to insist on political responsibility.
The work that MSF chooses does not occur in a vacuum,
but in a social order that both includes and excludes, that
both affirms and denies, and that both protects and attacks.
Our daily work is a struggle, and it is intensely medical,
and it is intensely personal. MSF is not a formal institution,
and with any luck at all, it never will be. It is a civil
society organization, and today civil society has a new
global role, a new informal legitimacy that is rooted in
its action and in its support from public opinion. It is
also rooted in the maturity of its intent, in for example
the human rights, the environmental and the humanitarian
movements, and of course, the movement for equitable trade.
Conflict and violence are not the only subjects of concern.
We, as members of civil society, will maintain our role
and our power if we remain lucid in our intent and independence.
As civil society we exist relative to the state, to its
institutions and its power. We also exist relative to other
non-state actors such as the private sector. Ours is not
to displace the responsibility of the state. Ours is not
to allow a humanitarian alibi to mask the state responsibility
to ensure justice and security. And ours is not to be co-managers
of misery with the state. If civil society identifies a
problem, it is not theirs to provide a solution, but it
is theirs to expect that states will translate this into
concrete and just solutions. Only the state has the legitimacy
and power to do this. Today, a growing injustice confronts
us. More than 90% of all death and suffering from infectious
diseases occurs in the developing world. Some of the reasons
that people die from diseases like AIDS, TB, Sleeping Sickness
and other tropical diseases is that life saving essential
medicines are either too expensive, are not available because
they are not seen as financially viable, or because there
is virtually no new research and development for priority
tropical diseases. This market failure is our next challenge.
The challenge however, is not ours alone. It is also for
governments, International Government Institutions, the
Pharmaceutical Industry and other NGOs to confront this
injustice. What we as a civil society movement
demand is change, not charity.
We affirm the independence of the humanitarian from the
political, but this is not to polarize the «good»
NGO against «bad» governments, or the «virtue»
of civil society against the «vice» of political
power. Such a polemic is false and dangerous. As with slavery
and welfare rights, history has shown that humanitarian
preoccupations born in civil society have gained influence
until they reach the political agenda. But these convergences
should not mask the distinctions that exist between the
political and the humanitarian. Humanitarian action takes
place in the short term, for limited groups and for limited
objectives. This is at the same time both its strength and
its limitation. The political can only be conceived in the
long term, which itself is the movement of societies. Humanitarian
action is by definition universal, or it is not. Humanitarian
responsibility has no frontiers. Wherever in the world there
is manifest distress, the humanitarian by vocation must
respond. By contrast, the political knows borders, and where
crisis occurs, political response will vary because historical
relations, balance of power, and the interests of one or
the other must be considered. The time and space of the
humanitarian are not those of the political. These vary
in opposing ways, and this is another way to locate the
founding principles of humanitarian action: the refusal
of all forms of problem solving through sacrifice of the
weak and vulnerable. No victim can be intentionally discriminated
against, OR neglected to the advantage of another. One life
today cannot be measured by its value tomorrow: and the
relief of suffering «here», cannot legitimize
the abandoning of relief «over there». The limitation
of means naturally must mean the making of choice, but the
context and the constraints of action do not alter the fundamentals
of this humanitarian vision. It is a vision that by definition
must ignore political choices.
Today there is a confusion and inherent ambiguity in the
development of socalled «military humanitarian operations».
We must reaffirm with vigor and clarity the principle of
an independent civilian humanitarianism. And we must criticize
those interventions called «military-humanitarian».
Humanitarian action exists only to preserve life, not to
eliminate it. Our weapons are our transparency, the clarity
of our intentions, as much as our medicines and our surgical
instruments. Our weapons cannot be fighter jets and tanks,
even if sometimes we think their use may respond to a necessity.
We are not the same, we cannot be seen to be the same, and
we cannot be made to be the same. Concretely, this is why
we refused any funding from NATO member states for our work
in Kosovo. And this is why we were critical then and are
critical now of the humanitarian discourse of NATO. It is
also why on the ground, we can work side by side with the
presence of armed forces, but certainly not under their
authority.
The debate on the «Droit d'Ingerence»- the right
of state intervention for so called humanitarian purposes
- is further evidence of this ambiguity. It seeks to put
at the level of the humanitarian, the political question
of the abuse of power, and to seek a humanitarian legitimacy
for a security action through military means. When one mixes
the humanitarian with the need for public security, then
one inevitably tars the humanitarian with the security brush.
It must be recalled that the UN Charter obliges states to
intervene sometimes by force to stop threats to international
peace and security. There is no need, and indeed a danger,
in using a humanitarian justification for this. In Helsinki
this weekend governments will sit down to establish the
makings of a European army, but to be available for humanitarian
purposes. We appeal to governments to go no further down
this path of dangerous ambiguity. But we also encourage
states to seek ways to enforce public security so that international
humanitarian and human rights law can be respected.
Humanitarian action comes with limitations. It cannot
be a substitute for political action. In Rwanda, early in
the genocide, MSF spoke out to the world to demand that
genocide be stopped by the use of force. And, so did the
Red Cross. It was however, a cry that met with institutional
paralysis; with acquiescence to self-interest, and with
a denial of political responsibility to stop a crime that
was «never again» to go unchallenged. The genocide
was over before the UN Operation Turquoise was launched.
I would like for a moment to acknowledge among our invited
guests Chantal Ndagijimana. She lost 40 members of her family
in Rwanda's genocide in 1994. Today she is a part of our
team in Brussels. She survived the genocide, but like a
million others, her mother and father, brothers and sisters
did not. And nor did many hundreds of our national staff.
I was Head of Mission in Kigali during that time. No words
can describe the sheer courage with which they worked. No
words can describe the horror that they died in. And no
words can describe the deepest sorrow that I and all in
MSF will carry always.
I remember what one of my patients said to me in Kigali
: «Ummera, Ummera - sha». It is a Rwandan saying
that loosely translated, means «courage, courage, my
friend - find and let live your courage». It was said
to me in Kigali at our hospital, by a woman who was not
just attacked with a machete, but her entire body rationally
and systematically mutilated. Her ears had been cut off.
And her face had been so carefully disfigured, that a pattern
was obvious in the slashes. There were hundreds of women,
children and men brought to the hospital that day, so many
that we had to lay them out on the street. And in many cases,
we operated on them then and there, as the gutters around
the hospital literally ran red with blood. She was one among
many - living an inhuman and simply indescribable suffering.
We could do little more for her at that moment than stop
the bleeding with a few necessary sutures. We were completely
overwhelmed, and she knew that there were so many others.
She knew and I knew. She released me from my own inescapable
hell. She said to me in the clearest voice I have ever heard
«allez, allez . ummera, ummera-sha» - «go,
go . my friend; find and let live your courage».
There are limits to humanitarianism. No doctor can stop
a genocide. No humanitarian can stop ethnic cleansing, just
as no humanitarian can make war. And no humanitarian can
make peace. These are political responsibilities, not humanitarian
imperatives. Let me say this very clearly: the humanitarian
act is the most apolitical of all acts, but if actions and
its morality are taken seriously, it has the most profound
of political implications. And the fight against impunity
is one of these implications.
This is exactly what has been affirmed with the creation
of the international criminal courts for both the Former
Yugoslavia and Rwanda. It is also what has been affirmed
with the adoption of statutes for an International Criminal
Court. These are significant steps. But today on the 51st
anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights,
the court does not yet exist, and the principles have only
been ratified by three states in the last year. At this
rate it will take 20 years before the court comes into being.
Must we wait this long? Whatever the political costs of
creating justice for states, MSF can and will testify that
the human costs of impunity are impossible to bear.
Only states can impose respect for humanitarian law and
that effort cannot be purely symbolic. Srebreneca was apparently
a safe haven in which we were present. The UN was also present.
It said it would protect. It had Blue Helmets on the ground.
And the UN stood silent and present - as the people of Srebrenica
were massacred.
After the deadly attempts of UN intervention in Former
Yougoslavia and Rwanda, which led to the death of thousands.
MSF objects to the principles of military intervention which
do not stipulate clear frameworks of responsibility and
transparency. MSF does not want military forces to show
that they can put up refugee tents faster than NGOs. Armies
should be at the service of governments and policies which
seek to protect the rights of victims.
If UN military operations are to protect civilian populations
in the future, going beyond the «mea culpa» excuses
of the Secretary General over Srebrenica and Rwanda, there
must be a reform of peacekeeping operations in the UN. Member
States of the Security Council must be held publicly accountable
for the decisions that they do or do not vote for. Their
right to veto should be regulated. Member States should
be bound to ensure that adequate means are made available
to implement the decisions they take.
Yes, humanitarian action has limits. It also has responsibility.
It is not only about rules of right conduct and technical
performance. It is at first an ethic framed in a morality.
The moral intention of the humanitarian act must be confronted
with its actual result. And it is here where any form of
moral neutrality about what is good must be rejected. The
result can be the use of the humanitarian in 1985 to support
forced migration in Ethiopia, or the use in 1996 of the
humanitarian to support a genocidal regime in the refugee
camps of Goma. Abstention is sometimes necessary so that
the humanitarian is not used against a population in crisis.
More recently, in North Korea, we were the first independent
humanitarian organization to gain access in 1995. However,
we chose to leave in the fall of 1998. Why? Because we came
to the conclusion that our assistance could NOT be given
freely and independent of political influence from the state
authorities. We found that the most vulnerable were likely
to remain so, as food aid is used to support a system that
in the first instance creates vulnerability and starvation
among millions. Our humanitarian action must be given independently,
with a freedom to assess, to deliver and to monitor assistance
so that the most vulnerable are assisted first. Aid must
not mask the causes of suffering, and it cannot be simply
an internal or foreign policy tool that creates rather than
counters human suffering. If this is the case, we must confront
the dilemma and consider abstention as the least of bad
options. As MSF, we constantly call into question the limits
and ambiguities of humanitarian action - particularly when
it submits in silence to the interests of states and armed
forces.
Last week, the United States Congress passed a bill authorizing
direct food transfers to the Rebels in South Sudan. This
is a missappropriation of the meaning and intent of humanitarian
assistance. It makes food a fuel of war. And it is a dereliction
of a state's duty to use any and all political means to
address a 17 year-long civil war that has left millions
dead. Sudan's civil war today is a human misery where millions
are displaced and at risk of starvation and disease; where
people are bombed, robbed, looted constantly, and even enslaved,
while corporate oil interests are protected, where humanitarian
space is so severely restricted that it exists only in pockets;
and where we and other NGOs and UN Agencies struggle to
bring humanitarian assistance and protection. Is food the
only political option to curb war? Food aid or humanitarian
assistance, if it is to be «humanitarian assistance»
- cannot be a tool in state-craft. In this case we must
denounce the perfidious use of food that confuses the meaning
of humanitarian assistance. If the political masks itself
in an ambulance, then it is certain that the ambulance will
be fired on. As well, if food is allowed to be used as a
weapon of war, then it also legitimates that populations
can be starved as a weapon of war.
Independent humanitarianism is a daily struggle to assist
and protect. In the vast majority of our projects it is
played out away from the media spotlight, and away from
the attention of the politically powerful. It is lived most
deeply, most intimately in the daily grind of forgotten
war and forgotten crisis. Numerous peoples of Africa literally
agonise in a continent rich in natural resources and culture.
Hundreds of thousands of our contemporaries are forced to
leave their lands and their family to search for work, food,
to educate their children and to stay alive. Men and women
risk their lives to embark on clandestine journeys only
to end up in a hellish immigration detention centre, or
barely surviving on the periphery of our so called civilised
world.
Our volunteers and staff live and work among people whose
dignity is violated every day. These volunteers choose freely
to use their liberty to make the world a more bearable place.
Despite grand debates on world order, the act of humanitarianism
comes down to one thing: individual human beings reaching
out to their counterparts who find themselves in the most
difficult circumstances. One bandage at a time, one suture
at a time, one vaccination at a time. And, uniquely for
Medecins Sans Frontieres, working in around 80 countries,
over 20 of which are in conflict, telling the world what
they have seen. All this in the hope that the cycles of
violence and destruction will not continue endlessly.
As we accept this extraordinary honor, we want again to
thank the Nobel Committee for its affirmation of the right
to humanitarian assistance around the globe. For its affirmation
of the road MSF has chosen to take: to remain outspoken,
passionate and deeply committed to its core principles of
volunteerism, impartiality, and its belief that every person
deserves both medical assistance and the recognition of
his or her humanity. We would like to take this opportunity
to state our deepest appreciation to the volunteers and
national staff who have made these ambitious ideals a concrete
reality, and who have, we believe, brought some peace to
the world that has experienced such immense suffering and
who are the living reality of MSF.