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Some
38-million Africans are at risk from an unprecedented hunger
crisis on the continent, a senior United Nations official told the
Security Council today, stressing that adequate political will and
resources can stem the tide of famine.
"Mass starvation in Africa is not inevitable," James Morris, the
Executive Director of the UN World Food Programme (WFP), said in an
open briefing to the Council. But in order to make progress, he
cautioned, "difficult political choices will have to be made, both
by African States and by traditional donor countries." In the short
term, an infusion of funds is urgently needed, while long-term
goals must include greater investment in agriculture and changes in
international trade regimes.
Mr. Morris described the upsurge in recent years of food
emergencies, saying his agency has gone from largely sponsoring
food-for-work and other development projects to being "the UN
equivalent of an ambulance service for the starving." Nearly 80 per
cent of WFP's work is now devoted to emergency response.
Examining the causes for this "explosion in food emergencies," Mr.
Morris cited collapsing economic systems, political and ethnic
violence, AIDS and weather conditions. All of these factors are
combining to exacerbate Africa's critical situation, while WFP has
received pledges of only 56 per cent of the $511 million needed to
help meet the continent's needs.
Looking to the broader picture, the WFP chief urged major changes,
including a shift from reliance on the United States for food aid.
"Last year, the US provided 62 per cent of all food aid worldwide,"
he said. "This is simply not sustainable."
He added that the recent controversy over genetically modified (GM)
food in southern Africa demonstrated the dangers of relying too
heavily on a single donor. "Requirements by some of the southern
African that GM maize from the US be milled have created a
logistical nightmare and we have been left scrambling, trying to
raise more cash contributions from other donors while confronting
the complexities of milling the maize to ensure there is no break
in the food pipeline."
At the same time, Mr. Morris urged the creation of a new global
trade environment, stressing that developing countries "simply
cannot compete with developed country subsidies that now amount to
$1 billion a day and allow food to flow into poorer countries,
making investments in agriculture unprofitable."
"People are hungry because their governments have made the wrong
political decisions," he said. "In the end, hunger is a political
creation and we must use political means to end it." - UN News.