ROME: One in eight people worldwide still suffers from chronic hunger,
the UN`s food agency said on Tuesday, describing the figure as
`unacceptable` and warning that the fight against hunger was slowing
down.
`With almost 870 million people chronically undernourished
in 2010-2012, the number of hungry people in the world remains
unacceptably high,` the Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO) said in
its 2012 report on food insecurity.
The latest figures show that
12.5 per cent of the world`s population, or one person in every eight,
has yet to be relieved of chronic hunger, it said.
`We live in a
world of plenty which has enough food to feed everyone. For us, the only
acceptable number is zero,` FAO head Jose Graziano da Silva told a
press conference as the report was unveiled.
`We live in a world of plenty which has enough food to feed everyone. For us, the only acceptable number is zero,` he said.
Oxfam`s
GROW campaign to fix the global food system lashed out at `government
inaction`. `The fact that almost 870 million people, more than the
population of the US, Europe and Canada, are hungry in a world which
produces enough for everyone to eat is the biggest scandal of our time,`
Oxfam`s Luca Chinotti said.
The Rome-based food agency, which
compiled the report along with the World Food Programme (WFP) and
International Fund for Agricultural development (IFAD), said the number
of hungry was down from one billion 20 years ago.
The FAO had
warned in 2009 that the number of global hungry had broken through the
one billion barrier, but in Tuesday`s report it admitted the data had
been off-target and produced fresh figures for the past two decades.
New
methods for estimating hunger levels showed that progress against
hunger in the past 20 years was `better than previously believed,` it
said. `Most of the progress, however, was achieved before 2007-08. Since
then, global progress in reducing hunger has slowed,` and must rally
again to meet the Millennium Development Goal of halving the world`s
hungry by 2015, it said.
The slowdown is due to multiple factors,
including `the global economic crisis, rising food prices, the growing
demand for bio-fuels, food speculation and climate change,` said Jomo
Sundaram, FAO assistant director-general.The vast majority of the
world`s hungry 852 million live in developing countries, where hunger
affects 14.9 per cent of the population. Most sufferers live in South
and East Asia and sub-Saharan Africa, the report said.
We are
losing the battle in sub-Saharan Africa: While hunger rates were down
annually over the past 20 years, the FAO warned that `considerable
differences among regions and individual countries remain`.
The
number of undernourished people has dropped sharply in East Asia, for
example, down from 261 million people in 1990-1992 to 176 million in
2010-2012.
But in sub-Saharan Africa, the figure has shot up from
170 million to 234 million, the report said. `We are losing the battle
in the sub-Saharan Africa, where the numbers of hungry are up 64 million
since 20 years ago.
Conflicts in North Africa have led to an increase in the number of hungry there as well,` Graziano da Silva said.
The
latest figures are based on new estimates of the proportion of hungry
people in the world after the FAO updated its methodology, Sundaram
said.
Figures will from now on be collated over three year periods, he said.
`We
note with particular concern that the recovery of the world economy
from the recent global financial crisis remains fragile, said Graziano
da Silva.
However, despite the warnings of a slowdown in beating
hunger, the report said the damage done by the crisis was not as bad as
had been expected.
`The increase in hunger during 2007-2010, the
period characterized by food price and economic crises, was less severe
than previously estimated,` it said.
The knock-on effect of
`economic shocks to many developing countries` from the struggling West
in particular `was less pronounced than initially thought.` `Recent GDP
estimates suggest that the `great recession` of 2008-09 resulted in only
a mild slowdown in many developing countries, and increases in domestic
staple food prices were very small in China, India and Indonesia,` it
added.
Boosting the lagging fight against hunger will rely on
`strong economic growth,` which leads to greater dietary diversity as
salaries rise, as well as government action, including financing public
nutrition and health programmes.
`The flat-lining in the number
of people being lifted out of hunger in the last five years should sound
alarm bells around the globe,` Oxfam said.-AFP
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