How lack of food security is failing a starving world
How lack of food security is failing a starving world
Starvation is a symptom of a larger problem involving land, health, power and ecological damage, say experts
Alex Renton
The Observer, Saturday 8 June 2013 15.34 EDT
Last week another 1 million children under five were declared dead because of malnutrition. This was not because of another famine or a new disease, but simply that an eminent panel of doctors and academics working for the Lancet published findings that showed the existing research on child mortality had got it wrong.
So the tens of thousands of anti-hunger campaigners who met in Hyde Park yesterday should not have been spreading 2 million paper petals for each of those dead children but 3.1 million. And the awful IF campaign headline statistic that a child dies from hunger every 15 seconds should have been "every 10 seconds".
These tragic figures are a big disappointment to a world that believes it is doing rather well on profound poverty. The numbers of humans living on less than $1.25 a day will be halved by 2015, a success for a Millennium Development Goal target set in 2000. But it turns out that, contrary to the wisdom of a generation of economists, growth does not necessarily reduce hunger, especially among the world's poorest. Child malnutrition has increased in India in the past decade, despite its economic boom. The world still has more than enough food but distributing it fairly, or even humanely, is not simple at all.
The Lancet report was released to give a push to Saturday's half-day summit on nutrition and growth, called by David Cameron ahead of the G8 wealthy nations meeting in Ireland later this month. "Food security" is an agenda item there, though pushed lower than it was at the beginning of the year.
More:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/global-development/2013/jun/08/food-security-failing-starving-world
FirstLight
(13,357 posts)it's hard to feel for India and Africa when our own are just a screwn. I shudder to think what things are gonna look like in another 10 years with climate change and drought. We may very well be looking at food rations and starvation on our own soil. We are on food stamps and It makes me scared at the end of the month when we get strapped,we don't have ';food security' as it is......
Igel
(35,293 posts)Except for that whole "us versus them" nonsense.
Food insecure at the end of the month?
Try being food insecure on the second day of the month, and knowing that it's only going to get worse.
Doctor_J
(36,392 posts)In ten years some multi-national will be selling air.
Doctor_J
(36,392 posts)It's pretty cool how everyone talks in FoxSpeak