Archive for the ‘Global Food Crisis’ Category

GLOBAL: Food crisis could worsen, warns FAO

Wednesday, December 31st, 2008

The food price crises of 2008 will continue into 2009 and might get worse, says the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO). The 2008 food crisis has already pushed 40 million people into hunger, bringing the number of undernourished in the world closer to a billion.

FAO economists made the gloomy prognosis at the release of their ninth progress report, State of Food Insecurity in the World 2008, since the 1996 World Food Summit on world hunger.

The authors warned that the situation in the Democratic Republic Congo (DRC), which recorded most of the increase in the number of hungry people, occurred in a single country as a result of widespread and persistent conflict, could get worse. Between 2003 and 2005, the number of hungry in the DRC rose from 11 million to 43 million, and the proportion of undernourished rose from 29 percent to 76 percent.

Amid myriad global crises, ‘busy, dynamic and constructive’ General Assembly underscored importance of genuine solidarity to ensure stable, secure world

Monday, December 29th, 2008
 Full_Report (pdf* format - 130.5 Kbytes)


GA/10806

Sixty-third General Assembly
HIGHLIGHTS

In a year dominated by economic tumult that upended marquee financial institutions to their knees, catalysed dramatic swings in food and energy prices, drove uneasy trade partners from the global negotiating table and spurred long-time adversaries into renewed conflict in Somalia, Afghanistan and the Democratic Republic of Congo, the General Assembly used the main part of its sixty-third session to begin shaping the broad contours of a strong and unified response.

Indeed, the “busy, dynamic and constructive work period” underscored the importance of fostering genuine solidarity that transcended differences, particularly amid the breakdown of the Bretton Woods system, said General Assembly President Miguel d’Escoto Brockmann of Nicaragua as he closed out the Assembly’s substantive session. Emphasizing that he and the Secretary-General saw “eye to eye” on all that must be done to achieve the Millennium Development Goals, he invited Member States to set out strategic development priorities to achieve -– even exceed -– the agreed targets. “We cannot afford to rest on our laurels,” he said, noting that there were many important issues that called for the Assembly’s collective dedication.

While presiding over the International Follow-Up Conference to the Monterrey Consensus, held in Doha, Qatar, Mr. d’Escoto told participants that there was a “moral duty” to do more than simply rearrange the faltering economic and financial system -– “we must transform it”. To review the workings of the global financial system, he had convened an 18-member commission of experts on the reform of the monetary and financial system, which would suggest steps for States to take in securing a more stable and sustainable global economic order. Such work dovetailed with his pledge to harness the efforts of the sixty-third session towards making the United Nations more democratic.

Half the world’s people knew no splendour — they knew only squalor and levels of poverty that contradicted their inherent human dignity, he continued. Every day, tens of thousands of people died from hunger, entire populations watched as their cultures disappeared and, with trillions being spent on wars of terror, the world desperately needed to move away from the “logic of death”. Developed country pledges to allocate 0.7 per cent of their gross national product to development assistance were unfilled, and developing countries’ ability to service debt was now a “staggering” burden.

“We must reorder our priorities if we are to fulfil the promises of security and well-being that billions of people have entrusted to us,” Mr. d’Escoto declared during the Assembly’s general debate. It was clear that such man-made problems called for human solutions, and he urged taking “brave steps to defuse the time bombs ticking at the heart of virtually all our societies”.

Determined to take “immediate and decisive actions” to overcome crises of food insecurity, climate change and the abrupt loss of confidence in the international economic system, the Assembly called on the United Nations to hold “at the highest level” a conference that would examine the impact of the world financial and economic crises on development. To that end, the Assembly President said he would work closely with the Secretariat to set the organizational arrangements by March 2009.

That request was one of many contained in a sweeping resolution adopted by consensus endorsing the Doha Declaration on Financing for Development — the outcome document of the Follow-up International Conference on Financing for Development to Review the Implementation of the 2002 Monterrey Consensus.

By the nine-part text, the Assembly reaffirmed commitments outlined in the Monterrey Consensus, the landmark 2002 agreement between rich and poor nations — signed in Monterrey, Mexico — to combat poverty and advance development. The text examined the ways in which developed and developing countries could deepen their partnership in such areas as domestic and international resource mobilization, trade, international financial and technical cooperation, external debt and systemic issues in global monetary, financial and trading systems.

The Assembly’s six-day general debate, which included a high-level meeting on the state of the Millennium Development Goals, heard 111 Heads of State and Government outline their priority concerns and reaffirm support for the 192-member body as the most democratic forum for global dialogue. There were undeniable signs that the Assembly was getting its priorities straight, Mr. d’Escoto said, noting that urgent appeals had been heard for a stronger United Nations, and for the Assembly to enter into serious negotiations in the coming months on realigning the Security Council to better reflect current geopolitical realities.

Echoing that call, United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon opened the Assembly’s debate with a sober reminder that the world had changed, “more than we may realize”, and that new reality brought with it challenges that were increasingly those of collaboration rather than confrontation. There was a danger of turning inwards, of retreating from progress made, particularly in the realm of development, and more equitably sharing the fruits of global growth.

“If ever there was a call to collective action -– a call for global leadership -– it is now,” the Secretary-General said, urging global leaders to embrace a common vision for the future. The world needed a new understanding of business ethics and governance, marked by more compassion and less faith in the “magic” of markets. While global growth had raised billions of people out of poverty, the poorest had never felt it so sharply. With international law and justice so widely embraced, those living in areas where human rights were abused had never been so vulnerable. As most of the world lived in peace and security, there was deepening violence in nations that could least afford it. “This is not right,” he stressed.

With that, the Assembly spared no time in tackling the issues. On the eve of its sixty-third session, world leaders adopted by consensus a political declaration on ” Africa’s development needs: state of implementation of various commitments, challenges and the way forward”, during a one-day high-level meeting of the same name. With the text, delegates aimed to reinvigorate existing commitments -– notably those made in the Millennium Declaration, the 2002 Monterrey Consensus on development financing and the 2002 Johannesburg Declaration on sustainable development –- at a time of both promise and challenge for Africa. The event featured four round-table discussions co-chaired by African Presidents, among others, and heard debate on issues ranging from debt relief to the effects of climate change on the continent’s agricultural sector.

The Assembly capped a year-long, global celebration of the sixtieth anniversary of the United Nations Declaration on Human Rights with the adoption of its own declaration, which underscored that “the living, driving force of all human rights unites us in our common goal to eradicate the manifold ills that plague our world”. By that text, the Assembly deplored that human rights and fundamental freedoms were not fully and universally respected in all parts of the world. All States had the responsibility to redress human rights violations, and not “shy away” from the magnitude of that challenge.

Looking beyond 2008 at his year-end press conference, Mr. Ban said there was no time to waste in reaching a new climate change deal before the end of 2009. “Extraordinary” leadership would be needed following the recent negotiations at the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change Conference in Poznań, Poland, and he planned to convene a climate change summit at the start of the Assembly’s sixty-fourth session. Other issues — such as combating malaria and HIV/AIDS, global terrorism, disarmament and non-proliferation -– also demanded attention, and in the area of human rights it would be essential to act upon the principle that justice was a pillar of peace, security and development.

Addressing the current unstable arms control and disarmament landscape, the Assembly adopted a series of resolutions on the recommendation of its First Committee (Disarmament and International Security) that urged Member States to take bolder steps towards ensuring security at national, regional and international levels. In all, the Assembly adopted 57 text that covered nuclear weapons and other weapons of mass destruction, disarmament aspects of outer space, conventional weapons, regional disarmament and security, other disarmament measures and international security, and the United Nations disarmament machinery.

In an attempt to better understand and address the major economic and policy challenges to long-term economic growth and sustainable development, particularly in light of the global financial crisis, the General Assembly laid the groundwork for in-depth consideration of those issues by unanimously adopting -– among 34 development-related actions put forward by its Second Committee (Economic and Financial) -– a series of comprehensive resolutions.

In the sixtieth anniversary year of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the Third Committee (Social, Humanitarian and Cultural) trained its efforts on strengthening the existing human rights frameworks, including by approving a landmark text creating a new Optional Protocol to the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. That text, which established an individual complaints procedure for violations of economic, social and cultural rights, was one of 58 resolutions and 6 decisions recommended by the Third Committee.

Balancing its ongoing engagement with some of the world’s most persistent special political cases with the need to meet emerging challenges, the Assembly agreed to adopt resolutions that welcomed the commitment of the parties to the Western Sahara dispute “to enter into a more intensive phase of negotiations”, underlined the need to shore up the Scientific Committee, and stressed how space technology could mitigate the impacts of climate change and reduce disaster risk. Those measures were among the 23 resolutions and 3 draft decisions adopted on the recommendation of the Fourth Committee (Special Political and Decolonization).

Acting on the main item of its current “personnel session”, the Fifth Committee (Administrative and Budgetary) approved new contractual arrangements for the United Nations, effective 1 July 2009, which would consist of temporary, fixed-term and continuing appointments, under a single set of staff rules. It also paved the way for the implementation of the new system of justice as of 1 July 2009, approving the statutes of the newly constituted United Nations Dispute and Appeals Tribunals. Based on its recommendations, the Assembly provided $429.5 million for 27 special political missions for the remainder of the biennium and assessed $449.86 million for the first six months of 2009 for the African Union-United Nations Hybrid Operation in Darfur (UNAMID).

The Assembly adopted 12 resolutions and 2 decisions contained in 16 reports of its Sixth Committee (Legal), including a text calling for an ad hoc committee to continue working on outstanding legal issues related to the new two-tiered formal administration of justice system for the United Nations. The Committee would meet from 20 to 24 April 2009 to take into account the views of the Fifth Committee (Administrative and Budgetary), as well as any further decisions taken before then. Set to be established by 1 January 2009, the new system would be composed of an Appeals Tribunal and a Dispute Tribunal. The new decentralized system would also strengthen the Ombudsman’s Office for a more effective address of grievances on an informal basis.

Summary of the plenary and Main Committees follows:

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DA welcomes proposal on global food reserve

Sunday, December 28th, 2008
MANILA, Philippines - Agriculture Secretary Arthur Yap has welcomed a proposal of the Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) for the establishment of emergency food reserves to help stabilize prices of grains and other basic agricultural commodities.

Yap, who made a similar proposal six months ago at the High-Level Conference on World Food Security organized by the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) in Rome, said he hopes that both developed and developing nations would support this proposal as food supplies tighten.

The DA chief reiterated his proposal for the creation of such global food reserves or stockpiles and called on donor-countries and multilateral institutions to support these actions before a recent global forum in Germany.

“We at the DA welcome the recommendation of the IFPRI on the setting up of small physical reserves for essential farm commodities, which we believe would help stabilize food prices especially now at a time when a global crisis triggered by the US economic slowdown is sweeping across the globe,” Yap said.

IFPRI director Joachim von Braun had proposed that such food stockpiles be managed by an appropriate United Nations (UN) agency with a track record in administering food reserves, like the World Food Program (WFP).

In his study titled “Food and Financial Crises: Implications for Agriculture and the Poor,” von Braun also called for the setting up of a “virtual reserve” to be implemented by the Group of Eight Plus Five and other large grain-exporting countries.

The virtual reserve could help stabilize world food prices by creating a high-level technical commission that would intervene in the futures markets and a global intelligence unit that could detect when prices are headed for another spiral.

Last June, Yap proposed the creation of food reserves before the FAO conference in Rome.

Under his proposal, contributions to these global food stockpiles could come from all member-nations as well as from interested donor-countries and multilateral financing institutions like the World Bank, the Asian Development Bank (ADB) and other regional development banks, and the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD).

Yap said rice should be first on the list of the proposed global reserve inventories because it is the staple consumed by almost three billion people across the world.

The proposed global reserves could be expanded later, he added, to include other staples such as wheat and corn.

Yap pointed out that setting up food reserves would benefit both deficit and surplus countries because a price band would be maintained and, which, at the low end, would serve to protect producers in exporting countries.

The high end of the band, Yap said, would serve to shield consumers of importing countries from the impact of soaring prices.

Yap restated his proposal, along with his call for a second “Green Revolution,” before the international workshop panel on “Feeding the Asian Tiger: Challenges and Implications for the World Markets” at the 10th German World Bank Forum held in Frankfurt, Germany held last month.

At the Frankfurt forum, Yap also noted that developing economies in Asia like the Philippines have to increase investments in agriculture to stem the lingering effects of a worldwide food crisis exacerbated by the financial contagion.

Despite an emerging global consensus for higher investments in this sector in light of the global food crisis, Yap said developing economies would have to increase such spending themselves, because they could not rely on rich nations to provide the bulk of the funding, given that donor-countries are reeling from the worst global financial crisis in over a half-century.

He noted that despite the decline in grain prices worldwide in the year’s second semester, the threat to Asia’s food security remains, considering that food staples like rice still cost more than they did in previous years.

For instance, rice prices in the world market last September were 147% higher than the 2006 levels and 134% higher than a year ago.

Yap said developing countries should not depend too much on first-world economies for food-related aid at this point as “the global financial crisis triggered by the economic downturn in the United States has imperiled the commitments made by donor countries and multilateral institutions to help developing countries stave off hunger and hike food production.” - GMANews.TV

Year of the hungry: 1,000,000,000 afflicted

Sunday, December 28th, 2008

 Despite the West’s pledge to halve world hunger, the number of people who are short of food will soon reach a shocking landmark

By Geoffrey Lean
Sunday, 28 December 2008

One billion people will go hungry around the globe next year for the first time in human history, as the international financial crisis deepens, the United Nations has told The Independent on Sunday.

The shocking landmark will be passed – despite a second record worldwide harvest in a row – because people are becoming too destitute to buy the food that is produced.

Decades of progress in reducing hunger are being abruptly reversed, dealing a devastating blow to a pledge by world leaders eight years ago to cut it in half by 2015.

Rich countries have failed to provide promised money to boost agriculture in the Third World; the financial crisis is starving developing countries of credit and driving their people into greater poverty, and food aid to the starving is expected to begin drying up next month.

Development charities recently called on US president-elect Barack Obama to put the escalating food crisis “front and centre” of his priorities.

Some 963 million people are now undernourished worldwide, according to the most recent survey of the crisis by the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), and the UN body expects the situation to worsen with the recession. “The number will rise steadily next year,” an FAO spokesman told the IoS last week. “We are looking at a billion people. That is clear.” The FAO fears the tally will go on increasing for years to come.

This directly contradicts an undertaking by the world’s leaders at a special summit in September 2000 to “reduce by half the proportion of people who suffer from hunger” from 1990 levels by 2015, as part of an ambitious set of Millennium Development Goals.

At the time, and for several years afterwards, the goal looked achievable, if challenging. Between 1990 and 2005 the number of undernourished people stayed more or less the same at between 800 and 850 million, even though world population grew by 1.2 billion, meaning that the proportion of a rapidly increasing humanity that went hungry was steadily falling.

Several countries – including Ghana, Peru, Mexico, Chile, Jamaica and Costa Rica – actually exceeded the target years ahead of time, while others such as Ethiopia, Nicaragua and Mozambique were on track to achieve it. Twenty-five developing nations looked as if they would be able to halve the absolute number of their hungry – not just the proportion of them in their rising populations – by the target date.

But over the past three years that progress has been thrown abruptly into reverse, with the first steep and sustained rise in hunger in decades leaving another 115 million people short of food. The increase began when prosperity was still increasing and has continued despite bumper harvests; a new FAO report shows that this year’s grain crop is set to grow by 5.4 per cent to 2,241 million tons, following a 6 per cent rise last year – ahead of population growth.

So the growth in hunger is not occurring, as in the past, because of shortage of food – but because people cannot afford to buy it even when it is plentiful. The main reason has been that high food prices have priced the poor out of the market.

Over the 12 months until last summer, wheat and maize prices more than doubled and rice prices more than tripled. This was due partly to the growth in biofuels which, the FAO reports, has taken over 100 million tons of cereals out of food supplies over the past year to fuel cars instead. One fill of a 4×4’s tank uses enough grain to feed one poor person for a year.

The organisation also blames speculation, population growth, the shrinking of food stocks to record lows and the increasing consumption of meat in developing countries such as China and India, which mops up grain supplies because they are used to feed livestock.

International prices have fallen sharply since the summer, as this year’s good harvest has further swelled supplies and the growing financial crisis has cut demand. But the FAO reports that the lower prices have failed to ease the crisis, while the increasing financial turmoil has made it worse.

Developing countries have not benefited from the falling worldwide cost of food, it says, because their currencies have depreciated against the dollar in which international prices are set and their domestic supplies remain scarce, keeping prices in local markets at record levels.

Virtually none of the increased production of the past two years has taken place in the Third World, partly because its farmers have been unable to afford expensive fertilisers and seeds while the profits of giant agrochemical and biotech companies have soared. Now as rich countries’ economies slump, they are importing fewer commodities and goods from developing ones, driving national incomes down and increasing unemployment and poverty. As employment falls in the West, Third World immigrants are losing their jobs and are no longer able to send back the money they save from their wages in remittances to their families, a financial boost that is often crucial in keeping them out of dire poverty.

Just as serious, the FAO adds, the credit that Third World farmers need to buy seeds, energy and agricultural chemicals – and to improve production – is drying up.

Aid, too, is falling precipitously. Earlier this month, the World Food Programme – the UN agency that provides food to the hungry – announced that it was running out of supplies. Unless it receives more soon it expects to have to start rationing aid next month, and to run out of food altogether for needy countries such as Haiti, Sudan and Bangladesh by March.

At a special summit in June last year, rich governments pledged $12.3bn (£8.4bn) to tackle the food crisis, but have so far handed over only $1bn of it, as they have scrambled to provide trillions to bail out failing banks.

“Overcoming the financial crisis is critical,” concludes the FAO in a recent report, “but continuing the fight against hunger by realising those pledged billions is no less important.” Jacques Diouf, the FAO’s director general, warns: “Unless the political will and donor pledges are turned into urgent and real actions, millions more will fall into deep poverty.”

Josette Sheeran, the executive director of the World Food Programme, added: “While we worry about Wall Street and the high street, we are also paying attention to the needs of those who live in places with no street.” She has called on governments to devote just 1 per cent of their bailout and stimulus packages to fighting hunger.

The worst is yet to come, taking the number of hungry beyond the one billion mark. As food prices fall, the FAO is reporting signs that farmers in Europe and North America are reducing their plantings for next year’s harvest – and the same thing is likely to happen in the Third World as the lack of credit stops its farmers from being able to buy the food and agricultural chemicals they need. So next year’s harvest, it is feared, will be smaller, even if the weather remains good.

The run of good seasons is unlikely to continue for long, even in the short run. And in the medium to long term, climate change is expected to make harvests dramatically worse. Mr Diouf predicts that, if the world fails to take urgent action to keep global warming beneath 2C, the emerging international target, “the global food production potential can be expected to contract severely” – with harvests dropping by up to 40 per cent in Africa, Asia and Latin America.

Global targets: a progress report

Goal one Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger between 1990 and 2015.

Progress 1.4 billion people live in extreme poverty, down from 42 per cent of the world population in 1990 to 26 per cent in 2005. Up to 75 per cent of the population is employed except in parts of Africa and Asia. Undernourished under-fives dropped from 33 per cent in 1990 to 26 per cent in 2006.

Success or failure? Still possible by 2015 but lack of progress in sub-Saharan Africa, where workers earn less than $1 a day.

Goal two Universal primary education by 2015.

Progress 570 million children worldwide enrolled in school. Those not enrolled fell from 103 million in 1999 to 73 million in 2006. Primary school enrolment reached 88 per cent in 2006, up 5 per cent per cent from 2000.

Success or failure? 38 million children in sub-Saharan Africa are not enrolled, while in southern Asia 18 million do not go to school. This goal may not be achieved by 2015, and there are barriers on girls going to school.

Goal three Promote gender equality in education by 2015 and empower women.

Progress 55 per cent of children not in school are girls. Women occupy about 30 per cent of parliamentary seats in 20 countries. Women occupy 40 per cent of all paid jobs, up 5 per cent on 1990.

Success or failure? 113 countries failed to achieve equality of enrolment; only 18 will meet the target. Since 2000, the proportion of women in parliaments rose from 13.5 to 17.9 per cent.

Goal four Reduce child mortality of under-fives by two-thirds between 1990 and 2015.

Progress Deaths of under-fives declined from 93 to 72 deaths per 1,000 live births between 1990 and 2006, and child deaths dropped below 10 million a year in 2006.

Success or failure? Children born in developing countries still 13 times more likely to die under five. Between 1990 and 2006, 26 countries made no progress in reducing childhood deaths, while in 27 others the mortality rate is flat or getting worse.

Goal five Improve maternal health and reduce mortality by two-thirds between 1990 and 2015.

Progress Maternal mortality decreased by less than 1 per cent per year between 1990 and 2005; 60 per cent of births were attended by health professionals in 2006, up 10 per cent since 1990.

Success or failure? 500,000 women a year in developing countries die during pregnancy. Worst progress of all goals.

Goal six Universal access to treatment for Aids/HIV by 2010 and reverse spread of HIV/Aids and malaria by 2015.

Progress New HIV cases declined from three million a year in 2001 to 2.7 million in 2007. Funding increased tenfold within a decade. Mosquito net production rose from 30 million in 2004 to 95 million in 2007.

Success or failure? 7,500 people a day infected with HIV; 5,500 die of Aids-related illness; 500 million new cases of malaria a year.

Goal seven Reduce loss of biodiversity by 2010 and halve number of people without access to safe water or sanitation by 2015.

Progress Deforestation declined to 7.3 million hectares a year; 1.6 billion people have access to drinking water since 1990.

Success or failure? 40 per cent of the world lives with water scarcity, and fish stocks are overexploited. One billion people still have no access to safe drinking water and 2.5 billion have no access to basic sanitation, yet target may still be achieved.

Goal eight Develop a global partnership for development.

Progress The UK is among the few nations to meet targets of giving 0.15 per cent of gross national Income in aid. The burden of debt in developing countries fell from 13 per cent of exports in 2000 to 7 per cent in 2006.

Success or failure? Aid dropped from £67bn in 2005 to £64bn in 2007 but needs to increase by £18bn a year. A third of essential medicines are available in 30 developing countries.

Small Farmers Become Exporters

Tuesday, December 23rd, 2008

Each day, when the women and children finish picking green beans, they weigh their harvest and pour the contents into crates. The beans are then hauled away and graded, packed and shipped to the airport in Addis Ababa. Within a few days, those beans will be on the shelves of a European grocery store.

This wasn’t always the way. Until recently, Ethiopian farmers worked independently on small plots, selling their produce locally for about 12 cents a kilogram. Meanwhile an exporter, Ethioflora Horticulture Farm, lost sales because it could not produce enough beans to meet export demand.

Then three years ago, USAID began supporting an effort to organize farmers into cooperatives, improve irrigation and produce high-quality beans to sell to Ethioflora at four times local market prices. The program increased production on small farms, and Ethioflora has expanded sales in Europe and successfully lobbied the Ethiopian government to allow more cargo flights into Addis Ababa.

“We had a lot of problems before these linkages were made,” said Ethioflora Manager Mulugeta Abebe. “The farmers were not coordinating.… They needed to learn how to cultivate and use irrigation. All of these things were not possible to do before, but have been done now.”

Often when small-scale producers link to an international buyer, they cannot meet production demands due to a lack of technology, skilled labor or transportation. USAID helps cooperatives overcome these obstacles by showing them how to understand and meet export quality standards and operate on sound business principles. In five years, the value of food grains, coffee and sugarcane sold through cooperatives has gone from $1 million to more than $20 million.

Ayu Deme’s life has changed since she joined the Dodicha Vegetable Cooperative four years ago. She is one of 155 members who together cultivated 170 acres of irrigated tomatoes and onions for the local market. Last year Dodicha began supplying green beans to Ethioflora, making a significant profit. Ayu says she is now able to send her older children to school, buy clothes for the family and purchase oxen.

Farmers Collect the Rain

Tuesday, December 23rd, 2008

Food and economic insecurity are all too common in Ethiopia’s large Oromia region, home to 25 million people. Subject to the vagaries of Ethiopia’s rain — often inadequate or, many years, failing altogether — families have trouble producing enough food with sufficient nutritional quality. At best, many get only one harvest a year.

That is dramatically changing with USAID’s help. To help stabilize water supply for the crops, farmers are given cement and shown how to build concrete water structures that collect the rain. They also learn how to construct simple drip irrigation systems to take the collected water to their crops during the drier growing season.

First Person

Monday, December 22nd, 2008

Women get involved in the election process, many for the first time

Women Take Pride in Participation

Mai Shaheen, a 25-year-old woman from Gaza, was one of nearly 120 Palestinians who received training from USAID on how to mount election observation campaigns — from the basics of training and fielding monitors to the complex procedures that should be observed. Based on what she learned from the two-day workshop, Mai compiled a handbook for election observers ahead of the January 9, 2005, presidential election.

She then recruited 25 volunteers — all women — trained them using simulation techniques from the course and got them accredited as domestic election observers. Nine of them stayed late for the ballot count, which ended around midnight. In a society where it is uncharacteristic for women to stay out of their homes late at night, many were impressed by their determination.

The training provided a chance for women like Mai to be involved in the electoral process for the first time, both as observers and voters. “The elections were a golden opportunity for women to participate in political life,” said Mai. “It was a challenge for us to prove that we are equal partners in society… With the training, I wanted to ensure the transparency of the elections and to see our new leader elected by the people.

Ethiopia/Kenya: Massive food crisis imminent in the Horn of Africa reports Red Cross

Saturday, December 20th, 2008

Source: The Irish Red Cross Society


The Irish Red Cross announced today that it will send €25,000 to help feed people in Ethiopia and in Kenya who are facing hunger and a potential famine.

The decision to send the money comes in the wake of an international appeal launched earlier this month for €73 million by the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies to deal with an exceptional humanitarian crisis across Ethiopia, Kenya and other countries forming the Horn of Africa.

The crisis arises as a result of a year-long drought in some areas, coupled with the combined effects of food and fuel price hikes and failing world economies, which are forcing already vulnerable people in Africa to exist on the brink of famine. According to findings in the recently published Red Cross Assessment report as many as 20 million people in the Horn of Africa, are now living on the margins of survival.

Urgent supplies of food and safe water are essential to prevent deaths especially among children, older people and those who are already poor are most at risk.

Noel Wardick, Head of the Irish Red Cross International Dept said: “The time to act is now.’We must not wait until we are confronted with images of emaciated children on our television screens in the New Year, which is what will happen if we do not provide urgent support.”

Notes for Editors

*Horn of Africa countries include Ethiopia, Djibouti, Eritrea, Somalia, Kenya and Uganda

Irish Red Cross Head of International Dept, Noel Wardick is also available for interview.

The Irish Red Cross works both at home in Ireland and overseas to help people in crisis to build secure futures for those who need our help. Donations can be made online or by calling 1850 50 70 70.

Ends.

Contact: Aoife Mac Eoin: 087 - 998 3788.

Rain threatens to make cholera outbreak worse

Saturday, December 20th, 2008

Torrential rain is threatening to spread Zimbabwe’s cholera outbreak into previously unaffected areas.

 By Peta Thornycroft
Last Updated: 11:22PM GMT 17 Dec 2008

Oxfam has warned the disease, which has already claimed more than 1,000 lives, will soon move beyond densely populated towns.

The charity is currently supplying 250,000 people with clean water but will need to increase supplies if the epidemic gathers pace and spreads ever further across the country.

Oxfam country director, Peter Mutoredzanwa, said: “So far it has been dry as the rains are late, so we had a breathing space, but now we are really fearful because many more will get cholera as rain is pouring.

“We have had to cut down our food supplies this month because the World Food Programme does not have enough to go around as it is still short of donations.

“We are expecting to support at least one million people in the cholera campaign, with water tablets, equipment like buckets and soap, as well as clean water and seeds, if we get the funds.”

Oxfam has launched a £4 million appeal for donations to help tackle the cholera sweeping Zimbabwe, mostly in urban areas where water reticulation plants have collapsed. The worst hit areas are working class suburbs in Harare, according to the World Health Organisation.

Mr Mutoredzanwa said: “As water reticulation is broken in so many areas, we need to buy so many buckets and of course soap. People have to store clean water, which we can provide, as many houses never, ever get water to their houses, so they are forced to use unreliable sources.

The World Food Programme has appealed for $140 million (£86million) to feed more than 5.2 million people – nearly half the population.

Zondiwe Phiri, secretary of a community water committee in Kadoma, about 60 miles west of Harare said her suburb was now able to get clean water from a bore hole drilled by Oxfam.

She said: ” We were often without water for days. People were getting water from dirty wells and other unsafe places… near a sewerage pond. Now we have clean water any time.”

Cholera is an easily preventable and can be treated with simple medicines. Zimbabwe’s once proud health system has collapsed and government hospitals are now mostly closed while non governmental organisations are running most of the state’s clinics around the country in cholera stricken areas

Zimbabwe cholera ‘could get worse’

Saturday, December 20th, 2008

Dec 19, 2008

The cholera crisis in Zimbabwe has infected around 18,000 people and could get worse as heavy rains threaten to spread the deadly disease, aid workers said.

An appeal to raise £4 million has been launched by Oxfam in an attempt to provide clean water, sanitation and food to more than one million people.

The charity has recently been forced to cut the amount of food rations it gives out after a fall in the amount of donations it receives.

Humanitarian director of Oxfam Jane Cocking said: “The rapid deterioration of the situation in Zimbabwe makes this an extremely grave humanitarian crisis which could deteriorate even further in 2009.

“While the international community battles for a political solution in the country, millions of Zimbabweans are going hungry.

“Oxfam is able to get clean water and food through to people who need it most. We need to respond now, there is no time to lose.”

The charity is currently handing out water purification tablets and soap to 620,000 people as well as providing food rations for 250,000.

It is also running public health projects, including drilling boreholes for clean water, which will help an estimated 425,000 people.

Latest figures from the United Nations show cholera, which is a waterborne disease, has infected 18,000 people and killed about 800 in Zimbabwe with many more deaths and infections believed to have gone unrecorded.

The disease is affecting nine out of the country’s 10 provinces and is likely to spread further if, as expected, there are more heavy rains in the next month.