Panafrican News Agency

Pope Benedict calls for long-term solution to Horn of Africa food crisis

Nairobi, Kenya (PANA) - Pope Benedict XVI has called on the international community to seek long-term solution to the food crisis dogging the Horn of Africa, instead of relying of quick-fix solutions.

The Pontiff said fighting hunger and famine required both immediate and long-term solutions.

At the same time, the UN Food and Agriculture (FAO) Director-General Jacques Diouf said that more than US$ 80 billion of additional investment was required annually in agriculture and related activities to ensure food supplies for the world in 2050.

Greater investment is the key to mitigating food price fluctuations and building poor people and nations' resilience, the pope said in his message sent from The Vatican, while Diouf spoke in Rome during the World Food Day celebrations on Monday.

"In the face of the death of entire communities due to hunger and the forced abandonment of people's lands of origin, immediate assistance is essential but it is necessary also to intervene in the medium and long-terms, so that international activity is not only responding to emergencies," said the Pope.

He described as "lamentable," the idea gaining ground that food was just merchandise and thus "subject to speculative movements".

Stressing the importance of agriculture, Pope Benedict said agricultural work should not be considered as a secondary activity but rather as an object of all strategies for growth and integral development.

"The background to the devastating impact of soaring and volatile food prices on the livelihoods of the poor is 20 years of under-investment in agriculture and neglect of the sector."

The crisis in the Horn of Africa shows that both short- and long-term responses are needed and that predictable financial resources are required to tackle the root causes of famine and food insecurity, Diouf noted, adding that "liberation from the yoke of hunger is the first concrete manifestation of the right to life."

During the occasion, UN agencies' chiefs and top international personalities met to celebrate the day, whose focus this year is on the recent wave of food price swings which threatens to push millions more people into hunger.

"Food prices - from crisis to stability", was chosen as the World Food Day theme for 2011 following five consecutive years of unstable and often rising food prices, which currently stand close to record levels.

Commemorating FAO's founding in 1945, World Food Day is celebrated in at least 150 countries across the globe. This year it also marked the 60th anniversary of the organization's move from its first seat in Washington to Rome.

"The world has the knowledge and financial means needed to ensure food security for all and thus a more stable world. Now is the time to make it happen," said Diouf.

Michelle Bachelet, former President of the Republic of Chile and current UN Under-Secretary-General and Executive Director, UN Women, said in a keynote speech that a significant cause of food insecurity was "the poverty and discrimination faced by women and girls, including women farmers.

"Since women are on the front lines of food security, we need to put their needs and rights at the forefront of trade and agricultural policies and investments to move from crisis to stability," Bachelet declared.

"If the world is to meet the challenge of feeding people today and 9 billion people by 2050, we must invest in girls and women, who are key to food security... Empowering women and girls is key to progress in development, food security and improved nutrition," she added.

In a message read to the ceremony, Obiang Nguema Mbasogo, President of the Republic of Equatorial Guinea and current Chair of the African Union, said that Africa and sub-Saharan Africa in particular was bearing the brunt of the food price crisis.

Mbasogo identified the priorities for Africa as "improving productivity and competitiveness of small farmers, investment in agriculture and policies related to land tenure."

He called for national and international solidarity to reduce the number of people suffering from hunger around the world.

Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini said that ridding the world of hunger required a different form of globalization, one reflecting the concepts of "sharing, generosity and cooperation.

"A hungry man is never a free man," Frattini declared, stressing "and often he is also a dangerous man."

Italian Agriculture Minister Francesco Saverio Romano said the world's rich, industrialized countries had the responsibility of restoring agriculture and food security to the centre of the international political agenda.

"Globalization must go hand in hand with rural development directed, in all parts of the world, to the well-being of populations," Romano emphasised.

Josette Sheeran, Executive Director of the World Food Programme (WFP), also stressed the fundamental role of women: "Women are the secret weapon against hunger. They are a powerful force in the fight against malnutrition," she said.

According to Sheeran, "When women have food, children eat. When they are helped to grow food, communities eat. So, an important key to fighting hunger is to provide women with knowledge and skills, capital and tools, to help achieve food security for themselves, their family and their community."
-0- PANA DJ/BOS 18Oct2011