With nearly one billion people still suffering from food shortages around the globe, the world must take a united stand against hunger, the United Nations said today, marking World Food Day.
The number of the worldโs hungry has dipped slightly from its record high last year, but โwe are continually reminded that the worldโs food systems are not working in ways that ensure food security for the most vulnerable members of our societies,โ Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said in his message on the Day.
The Millennium Development Goal (MDG) of halving the proportion of hungry people in the world is a pillar for achieving all eight of the globally-agreed targets with a 2015 deadline, Mr. Ban stressed.
โWhen people are hungry, they cannot break the crippling chains of poverty, and are vulnerable to infectious diseases,โ he said. โWhen children are hungry, they cannot grow, learn and develop.โ
This year alone, the Secretary-General pointed out, millions have been pushed into hunger by the earthquake in Haiti, the drought in the Sahel and floods in Pakistan, while the twin food and financial crises continue to affect the worldโs most vulnerable.
He highlighted the need for global cooperation โ bringing together governments, intergovernmental organizations, regional and sub-regional bodies, business and civil society groups โ to combat hunger.
โIncreasingly, their approach is comprehensive,โ Mr. Ban said, covering all aspects of food security, ranging from small farms to feeding schoolchildren.
He urged everyone to press ahead with this approach to build on progress made in reducing the number of hungry people in the world. โLet us unite against hunger and ensure food and nutrition security for all.โ
The Day is commemorated every year on 16 October, marking the date of the founding of the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) in 1945.
The agencyโs 1billionhungry.org campaign, which aims to encourage governments to make eliminating hunger their top priority, has surpassed 1 million signatures.
A celebration was held to commemorate the Day in Rome today, with the FAO appointing four new Goodwill Ambassadors โ Italian actor Raoul Bova, Canadian singer Cรฉline Dion, Filipino singer Lea Salonga and United States actress Susan Sarandon โ to raise awareness of the global fight against hunger.
By taking on the role, they commit themselves to addressing the universal humanitarian goals underpinning the agencyโs mission to build a food-secure world.
Also taking part in the ceremony were the heads of the FAO, the UN World Food Programme (WFP) and the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD).
Kanayo F. Nwanze, President of IFAD, urged world leaders to boost investments in agriculture and in enhancing farm productivity.
It is estimated that half of the worldโs poor are smallholder agriculturalists, with more than 2 billion men and women in Africa, Asia and Latin America depending on smallholder farms.
โSmallholder farmers can feed the world, but they cannot do it alone,โ he told reporters on the sidelines of todayโs event. โGreater long-term investment in agriculture is needed, creating conditions to bring rural people out of subsistence and into the marketplace.โ
Mr. Nwanze underlined the crucial role of agriculture in fighting poverty.
โAgriculture is the key to food security and a fundamental engine of economic growth and wealth generation,โ he noted.
For its part, the UN World Food Programme (WFP) hailed the bold leadership of governments in finding lasting solutions to hunger and malnutrition.
โWhen we act together, we have the power to bring about real change in the lives of millions of people who would otherwise struggle to feed their families,โ said the agencyโs Deputy Executive Director for Hunger Solutions, Sheila Sislu.
She pointed to the example of Cape Verde, whose Government took full ownership of the national school meals programmes last month after more than three decades of cooperation with WFP.
The UN Special Rapporteur on the right to food today said there is little to rejoice about on World Food Day, calling for a shift to low-carbon agriculture to ensure there is enough food for all, especially in the face of climate change.
There are nearly one billion hungry people in the world, โbut the worst may still be ahead, since current agricultural developments are also threatening the ability for our childrenโs children to feed themselves,โ Olivier De Schutter cautioned.
Current farming methods focus on the provision of chemical fertilizers and a greater mechanization of production. โSuch efforts are far distant from the professed commitment to fight climate change and to support small-scale, family agriculture,โ he said.
The current approach, Mr. De Schutter stressed, is a โrecipe for disaster,โ calling for reliance on agro-forestry, better water harvesting techniques and other low-carbon methods to ensure that farming plays a large role in mitigating climate changeโs effects instead of exacerbating them.