DJ Bobo Fights World Hunger

DJ BOBO, the internationally renowned Swiss artist and winner of around ten World Music Awards, today takes up his appointment as National Ambassador Against Hunger for WFP.

WFP is currently feeding six million people in Ethiopia, including 670,000 children thanks to its school feeding programmes.

Education remains the best way of escaping the vicious circle of poverty, illiteracy and hunger. In 2005, WFP enabled 21.7 million children in 72 countries to go to school.

Read more at alertnet.org.

All I See Is Dead People

Marc Haron juxtaposes war statistics in his new article, All I See Are Dead People. He compares the tragic Iraq war, which, so far, has led to over 30,000 or 650,000 Iraqi deaths, depending on how one counts. In fact, Haron doesn’t mention it, but more Americans have died in the Iraq war than 9/11. (I don’t know about you, but I feel less safe, meaning those brave American soldiers and American civilians died in vain.) Marc Haron also compares the tragic 9/11 attacks to the tragic deaths of starving children everyday, saying that it’s as if, everyday, sixteen planes flew into giant skyscrapers the size of the World Trade Center buildings, mostly full of children, killing everyone inside.

As horrific as the war in Iraq is, Iraqis aren’t the only ones on the planet who are dying. According to the United Nation’s World Food Program, every five seconds a child dies because that child is hungry.

We are not talking about war here, just everyday starvation. Children neglected by the warmongers in Washington and the finance capitalists on Wall Street. Children who could be saved, if it wasn’t for the fact that food goes primarily to those who can buy it, not to those who need it. Does that “trouble” and “grieve” Bush?

One child dead from hunger every five seconds. That’s twelve dead children every minute. That’s 720 dead children every hour. That’s 17,280 dead children every day.

The United Nations estimates that 25,000 people die every day from hunger and poverty. Obviously, a lot of them are children.

[…]

On September 11, 2001, five years ago, 3,000 people died. That changed everything, right?

Yesterday, 25,000 people died from hunger and poverty. It’s as if sixteen planes flew into giant skyscrapers the size of the World Trade Center buildings, mostly full of children, killing everyone inside.

That changed everything, right?

Probably not, because it happened again today, and will happen again tomorrow, and again, and again, and again.

If 25,000 people die every day from hunger and poverty, that means over 9 million die every year — 6 million of them children.

That’s one-and-a-half Holocausts every year. No gas, no deliberate murder. Just deliberate neglect.

Millions Starving Shame the World, U.N. Says

By Thalif Deen – Inter Press Service

United Nations (IPS): Since hunger and famine are still widespread in parts of Africa and Asia, the international community is in violation of the right to food as a basic universal human right, according to a new study released by the United Nations.

“Despite promises to eradicate hunger, there has been little progress in reducing the global number of victims of hunger,” said Jean Ziegler, the U.N. special rapporteur on the right to food and author of the report.

More than 852 million people — about 13 percent of the world population — do not have enough food each day to sustain a healthy life, according to the Rome-based Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).

Of this, about 815 million people live in developing countries, 28 million in “transition” countries of the former Eastern Europe and ex-Soviet republics, and about nine million in the industrialized world.

“It is a shame on humanity that in a world that is richer than ever before, six million children due of malnutrition and related illnesses before they reach the age of five,” Ziegler said.

The study, which goes before the current 61st session of the General Assembly, points out that the majority of the hungry live in Asia and Africa, while about 80 percent live in rural areas and depend on agriculture and pastoralism to survive.

“They are hungry because they do not have enough work, or access to productive resources like and water sufficient to feed their families,” it says.

In a statement released Monday to commemorate both World Food Day and the International Day for the Eradication of Poverty, U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan said the world has the resources and the know-how to make hunger history. “What we need is political will and resolve,” he said.

Annan also said that a decade after world leaders pledged at the World Food Summit to halve the number of chronically undernourished by 2015, “the number has actually increased”.

Ziegler’s study says that all human beings have the right to live in dignity, free from hunger. “The right to food is a human right,” it stresses.

He also criticizes the “current massive under-funding” of U.N. programmes, especially in Darfur (Sudan), the Sahel (including Mali, Mauritania, the Niger, Burkina Faso and Chad) and the Horn of Africa (including Djibouti, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Somalia and Kenya) as “unacceptable”.

Outside of Africa, hunger and food shortages are also affecting countries such as Afghanistan and North Korea.

“All governments have a responsibility to respond to urgent (U.N.) appeals in relation to food crises,” says Ziegler.

Frederic Mousseau, a food security consultant for international relief organizations such as Doctors Without Borders and Action Against Hunger, says the Geneva Conventions governing the treatment of prisoners of war state that victims of conflict, like the millions of displaced people in Darfur, must receive adequate food assistance.

“The international community has a legal obligation to provide emergency assistance in such a situation. Unfortunately, this form of assistance is commonly under-funded in most conflict zones,” Mousseau told IPS.

Often the U.N.’s World Food Programme (WFP) has to cut food rations by half or delay distribution because of this lack of funding, he added.

“This is unacceptable because people who have lost their land or their job have no other option than to rely on external assistance for their survival,” said Mousseau, co-author of a new report “Sahel: A Prisoner of Starvation?” published by the San Francisco-based Oakland Institute.

In the case of Sahel and the Horn of Africa, which — apart from Somalia — are not countries at war, the problem is much wider.

On the one hand, he said, there is under-funding of relief assistance. For example the eight-month delay by the donor countries during the food crisis in Niger in 2005 resulted in 3.6 million people being starved.

“But more important we need to examine factors that lead to such severe food crises,” Mousseau said.

One of the primary reasons has been the absence of development policies geared toward providing support for rural development and small-scale farmers to ensure long-term food security.

Many countries have also been prevented by the donor countries and international financial institutions from implementing economic and trade policies that would support local producers and their markets, which could prevent a country from facing widespread hunger and destitution, Mousseau added.

Children Hungry In A Land Of Plenty

In a world such as ours where there is enough food to feed everybody, I find it extremely inappropriate and shameful for anyone to go hungry. Yet, this happens! Even worse, you know something’s terribly wrong with the social structure when the people who produce the food suffer from that preventable hunger.

It gets even worse! Unfortunately, this problem mixes with child labor in the most disgusting of marriages. In her article, Children Hungry In A Land Of Plenty, Susan Levine points out that nearly 80% of children living on farms in the Worcester municipality participated in commercial agriculture during school holidays, on weekends or after school, but yet many children from these productive areas suffer from hunger and poverty, many have to beg, steal food or sniff glue as means to suppress their hunger.

Susan Levine continues by saying:

During the week, children who attend school and who are eligible for the feeding scheme (60% of children are reported to be hungry in the Rawsonville/Slanghoek region) look forward to their ration of two slices of bread and a glass of milk.

At one school, though, the teachers expressed their concern that not all the children receive food, and so children on the feeding scheme are asked to share their ration, which means that some might only have one slice of bread per day.

The increased rate of hunger among children in this rich agricultural belt is symptomatic of deep structural inequalities, and yet hunger is locally understood as the consequence of parental neglect.

Am I Free Yet?

Martin Luther King Hunger Quote

The UN says that a 40 billion dollar increase in funding could feed, clothe and educate the entire world. Yet, the United States government spends 400 billion dollars a year on “defense” and spent over $310 billion extra so far on the Iraqi war. While almost half the world lives on less than $2.00 a day, the US people allow their government to waste resources imperialistically covering the globe with military troops:

Basic health, food, and nutrition for everyone in the world could be provided for the same amount that the people in the United States and Europe spend on perfume – about 13 billion dollars. However, that’s nothing compared to the US’s $400 billion military budget and the hundreds of billions more spent on the Iraq war.

Instead of feeding the 18,000 children who die from hunger every day, the US government does this:

“A nation that continues year after year to spend more money on military defense than on programs of social uplift is approaching spiritual doom.”
Martin Luther King, Jr.

NIGER: Farmers See Green

Good rainfall in recent months has boosted harvests in arid Niger and reduced the risk of more hunger for a population that has long been vulnerable to food shortages, local authorities said.

According to the United Nation’s World Food Programme (WFP), about 70 percent of Niger’s 13 million people live below the poverty line and 3.8 million are undernourished.

Read entire IRIN article.