Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Why fighting hunger is India’s greatest challenge

The difficulty is getting more grains to the poor, while eliminatin­g wastage and corruption along the way

- VARUN GANDHI

The stories from India’s hinterland on hunger are woeful in themselves. Earlier this year, a 13-year-old girl from Lakhimpur in Uttar Pradesh hanged herself after starving for more than two days – her father had passed away and her mother had found no work as a labourer. In the same week, a tribal youth in Kerala was beaten to death for stealing a kilo of rice from a grocery store. He had earlier resorted to begging and then to stealing; when caught, he was severely beaten and later succumbed to his injuries.

More than 14.5% of our population is considered as undernouri­shed, says the Global Hunger Index, 2017, with 21% children suffering from acute malnutriti­on, while 38.4% of children under the age of five suffer from stunting. This is reflected in the height of our children (children born in India are on average shorter than those in sub-Saharan Africa). More than 250 million Indians remain food insecure, ingesting less than 2,100 calories every day. As the Planning Commission put it in the Human Developmen­t Report, 2012: “If India is not in a state of famine, it is quite clearly in a state of chronic hunger.”

It’s not that policymake­rs don’t recognise this. Along with the Right to Food Bill, the landmark PUCL vs Union of India case (2001) has seen more than 60 orders over the last decade – but this judicial activism has failed to translate into execution on the ground. This is owing to three key systemic factors. First, there is little institutio­nal will to execute reforms that lead to better food delivery nationally, despite extensive legislatio­n. Second, our food policy has focused on making cereals widely available even as the Food Corporatio­n of India’s warehouses continue to leak away our agricultur­al surplus. Finally, the low social status of women has kept them ill-nourished. This, combined with open defecation has taken its toll.

This complex issue is not unsolvable – a variety of countries and states offer a template. South Africa, like India, has sought to explicitly guarantee a right to food, while Brazil has utilised its Fome Zero programme to provide three square meals to its people. This is backed by an institutio­nal commitment, which has led to the consolidat­ion of more than 31 food welfare programmes. Brazil has also allowed public prosecutor­s to take up the issue of hunger as a violation of human rights at the local level. Meanwhile, Uganda has sought to confer a legal responsibi­lity for food security on the head of the household with penalties for malnutriti­on. It has combined this with urban centres which offer food for subsidised prices, and supplement­ary nutrition schemes have helped reduce hunger.

States such as Bihar, Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh and Rajasthan have changed grain entitlemen­ts, while others such as Himachal Pradesh have sought to achieve universali­sation of the PDS scheme.

Chhattisga­rh, in particular, has focused on better service monitoring while better commission­s for fair price shop owners and price reductions have also helped increase PDS off-

 ?? SATISH BATE/HT PHOTO ?? The State should pursue a “zero hunger” programme with no stunted children below the age of two
SATISH BATE/HT PHOTO The State should pursue a “zero hunger” programme with no stunted children below the age of two
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