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Mukesh Kapila

Mukesh Kapila

Contributor
Mukesh Kapila is professor emeritus at the University of Manchester, and served in senior roles at the UK Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office, United Nations, World Health Organisation, International Federation of Red Cross Red Crescent Societies, and advised multilateral bodies including World Bank, and NGOs. His work in global health, humanitarian affairs, conflict and security, international development, human rights, and diplomacy has received many awards and taken him to 120 countries.
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Hundreds of internally displaced Palestinians gather outside a charity kitchen in Gaza city to receive limited food rations earlier this month. EPA
The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation is the best of bad options

At this stage, it may be the only option to deliver aid to the besieged territory

May 27, 2025
A Palestinian girl waits for her falafel to be prepared at the Bureij refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip on April 28. AFP
Humanitarianism has to keep pace with the changing political climate

Preserving aid's ancient principles is still possible even with a more practical approach

May 01, 2025
A street vendor walks past the USAID office in Abidjan on March 22. AFP
Countries need to go back to the drawing board on foreign aid

The shifted world order requires a radical re-envisioning of how much is spent on aid and assistance

April 03, 2025
AFP, AP
Restoring the moral purpose of aid is the right response to Trump

As a veteran of the sector, even I have long been sceptical of aid, but there is a way to fix it

February 28, 2025
Associated News and Nick Donaldson / The National
Trump’s WHO exit is a chance for it to change

The US leader's executive order is regrettable and disruptive but the global health agency's 'business as usual' approach was increasingly untenable

February 07, 2025
Syrian women hold portraits of their missing loved ones during a protest march in Idlib last month. EPA
There are many paths to justice – which will Syria choose?

Victims of the country’s dark history deserve accountability, but many obstacles stand in the way

January 10, 2025
A Syrian Kurdish woman collects clothes and food in the northeastern city of Qamishli on December 7, 2024, to distribute to Kurds displaced from towns in the Aleppo countryside. Kurdish-led fighters, who already controlled most of northeastern Syria, said on December 6 that they had moved into eastern areas formerly held by the government as Syrian troops withdrew. (Photo by Delil SOULEIMAN / AFP)
How to repair a country like Syria

Syrian recovery deserves an improved international aid response

December 23, 2024
Demonstrators protesting atrocities often use the language of 'genocide', even if that allegation is difficult to prove legally. Reuters
Does the language of 'genocide' enable or hinder a more humane world?

The UN Genocide Convention was signed 76 years ago, but even today the crime is hard to prevent

December 09, 2024
Former President Donald Trump meets Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy at Trump Tower, on September 27, in New York. AP
If not peace, a four-year pause in death and destruction is still a deal

Freezing wars is worthwhile when peace is elusive

November 20, 2024
Heba Al Sanosi, who manages a community kitchen run by local volunteers for the Sudanese, who are affected by conflict and extreme hunger and are out of reach of international aid efforts, at their cooking area, in Omdurman, Sudan, on September 19. Reuters
Humanising wars requires going beyond the Geneva Conventions

A way forward is to encourage fighters to find inspiration in their own cultural decencies

October 28, 2024
Unifil soldiers have been injured by Israeli forces this month. AFP
Unifil can't keep the peace in Lebanon, but it should stay there anyway

Despite Israel's attempts to force its peacekeepers aside, the UN presence can still be a catalyst for change

October 14, 2024
US President Joe Biden during the UN General Assembly on September 24 in New York City. Getty Images/AFP
Why is multilateralism failing to deliver?

Disappointment with multilateralism inevitably translates into discontent with the UN because they are so intertwined

September 26, 2024
A student waves Bangladesh's national flag, during a protest to demand accountability and trial against the country's ousted Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, near Dhaka University in the capital on August 12. AFP
What is a country's rationale in granting asylum to fallen leaders?

Retaining asylum possibilities for disgraced leaders is worth retaining as a pragmatic option for crisis resolution

August 20, 2024
Both US President Joe Biden and Republican challenger Donald Trump were urged to undergo cognitive testing. Mr Biden was eventually persuaded to withdraw but with Mr Trump still in the race, the ability of leaders is of legitimate public interest. Reuters
How should we assess a leader's fitness to govern?

Medical screenings, and cognitive and personality tests are commonly used in many sectors but not so for the most consequential job of leading a nation

July 24, 2024
A damaged wall bearing the UNRWA logo at a camp for internally displaced people in Rafah last month. AFP
Should UNRWA step back from its Gaza operations?

Despite being a noble agency, it has become politically controversial and ineffective

June 12, 2024

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