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UN food summit ends in fiasco
By Peter Daniels
19 June 2002
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Last weeks four-day meeting of the United Nations
Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) in Italy ended in a fiasco
after it was essentially boycotted by the wealthy countries of
North America and the European Union.
According to the FAO, an estimated 815 million people around
the world face chronic hunger and undernourishment. Some 777 million
of these are in the so-called developing world. One person dies
every four seconds as a direct or indirect result of malnutrition.
Fifty-five percent of the 12 million children who die yearly are
victims of malnutrition.
Within the context of chronic worldwide hunger, the specter
of mass starvation looms in sub-Saharan Africa, where 12.8 million
people in six countries are at risk of death from starvation because
of famine, drought and floods. The concentration of millions of
AIDS victims in rural areas of these countries is devastating
farming areas and worsening the food shortages.
Faced with this human disaster, however, the only Western leaders
who came to the FAO meeting in Rome were the prime minister of
the host country, Silvio Berlusconi, and Jose Maria Aznar of Spain,
the country that presently holds the European Unions rotating
presidency. While 181 countries were represented, 74 by heads
of state or government, only Berlusconi and Aznar attended from
the wealthy countries.
The US and most other members of the Organization of Economic
Cooperation and Development, including Germany, France, Denmark
and Canada, were represented in Rome by agriculture ministers.
Britain was even more contemptuous, sending a junior minister
rather than the cabinet member who runs the Department for Environment,
Food and Rural Affairs. The virtual boycott of the FAO meeting
was made all the more obvious by the fact these same governments
were represented by their top leaders at a NATO meeting, also
held in Rome, only two weeks earlier.
The provocative snub of the FAO meeting by all the major powers
was their way of signaling their rejection of the call for more
direct agricultural development aid from the West. The FAO has
said an additional $24 billion in such assistance is needed to
fight malnutrition and starvation. FAO Director General Jacques
Diouf, pointing to the absentees, said, We have a good indication
of the political priority that is given to the tragedy of hunger.
By staying away from Rome, top US officials also avoided dealing
with the criticism of the recently enacted farm bill in Washington,
which increases subsidies to huge agribusinesses by $18 billion
annually. While touting free trade, the US government
arrogates to itself the right to dump US agricultural exports
in the poorest countries, wiping out the livelihoods of tens if
not hundreds of millions in Africa and elsewhere.
The last FAO summit took place in 1996, and ended with a pledge
to cut world hunger in half by the year 2015. Nearly one-third
of the way toward that date, the official figures show that little
or no progress is being made.
Some officials tried to claim that a drop in the number of
hungry and malnourished of about six million a year in the past
six years showed progress. This figure must jump to 22 million
a year if the original goal is to be met, however. At current
rates, 122 million people will die from hunger-related diseases
by 2015.
Even assuming a modest drop in hunger in the last few years,
the bulk of the reduction has taken place in China, where rapid
economic growth has reportedly cut the number of hungry by 76
million. In most countries, including more than two-thirds of
99 Third World nations studied by the FAO, hunger has increased
over the past decade.
Malnutrition has grown in the Congo, India, Tanzania, North
Korea, Bangladesh, Afghanistan, Venezuela, Kenya and Iraq, among
other countries. If China is not included, world malnutrition
has actually risen since 1996.
The situation is most dire in the countries of Malawi, Mozambique,
Swaziland, Zambia, Zimbabwe and Lesotho, where starvation for
millions is imminent. In Zambia, for instance, some 2.3 million
people need food assistance between now and March 2003. An FAO
report stated that all the classic signs of acute social
stress are evident in the country. People are turning
to desperate measures, including eating potentially poisonous
wild foods, stealing crops and prostitution, to get enough for
their families to eat.
HIV infection in Africa introduces a double-barreled threat.
With levels of infection reaching 20-30 percent in most of these
countries, the highest rates in the world, millions of people
are weakened by illness just when food supplies are running out.
Death rates are already significantly higher than would be expected
from AIDS itself.
In Lesotho, the rate of HIV infection is about 26.5 percent,
and 35 percent among adults. In Malawi more than 70 percent of
the population does not have enough food. In Mozambique, severe
flooding in 2000 and 2001 has been followed by drought in 2002.
The brazenness of the Western boycott in the face of this suffering
points to a fundamental reversal of policy that has taken place
over the last two decades. The United Nations and its affiliated
agencies, at least in the first three decades after the Second
World War, attempted to mitigate economic conflicts between the
major imperialist powers and the colonial and semi-colonial countries.
Development aid was doled out and bourgeois nationalist regimes
were propped up.
Today this has given way to the complete subordination of every
national economy to the demands of Western capital, enforced by
the International Monetary Fund. As Clare Short, Britains
international development secretary, bluntly explained, Im
not sending a minister because I dont expect it to be an
effective summit. The FAO is an old-fashioned UN organization
and it needs improvement, she added. The FAO needs
to tighten up its act.
The message is clear: there can be no old-fashioned
aid as in the past. Short echoes the call for reform
of the UN bureaucracy that has been spearheaded by Republican
and Democratic administrations in Washington. The major imperialist
powers, which have always called the shots at United Nations headquarters,
are now making it clear that nothing will be allowed to interfere
with the profit interests of global capitalism.
If the world leaders didnt show up at the food summit,
its because their business is defending profits, not fighting
hunger. In the case of the US, the Bush administration found a
way to use the discussion on hunger to advance the interests of
US big business. Agriculture Secretary Ann Veneman, leading the
American delegation, came with a very specific purpose in mindsecuring
approval for genetically modified crops. The FAO meeting endorsed
research into these crops, thus handing a major victory to huge
US biotechnology firms.
The root cause of world hunger is not inadequate food supplies.
Food shortages go hand in hand with food surpluses under capitalism.
This situation applies to the US as well as the poorest countries.
The US grows 40 percent more food than it needs, but hunger is
widespread and 26 million people in America rely on food stamp
assistance. India has a record surplus of 59 million tons of grain,
but almost half of Indian children are undernourished.
See Also:
UNICEF documents failure to
alleviate child poverty and disease
[22 April 2002]
UN agency reports
more than 800 million hungry worldwide
[17 January 2001]
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