Iran Daily

UN report sends ‘sobering message’ of deeply entrenched hunger globally

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In much of the world, “hunger remains deeply entrenched and is rising”, the UN chief said on Monday, launching this year’s major UN food security update, highlighti­ng that over the past five years, tens of millions of people have joined the ranks of the chronicall­y undernouri­shed.

As countries “continue to grapple with malnutriti­on in all its forms, including the growing burden of obesity,” Secretaryg­eneral António Guterres said that this year’s State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World report “sends a sobering message”, un.org reported.

The authoritat­ive global study tracking progress toward ending hunger and malnutriti­on, is produced jointly by the Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on (FAO), Internatio­nal Fund for Agricultur­e (IFAD), the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF), World Food Programme (WFP) and World Health Organizati­on (WHO).

In the foreword, the heads of the UN agencies involved cautioned that “five years after the world committed to end hunger, food insecurity and all forms of malnutriti­on, we are still off track to achieve this objective by 2030.”

In his video message marking the launch, the UN chief spelled out that if the current trend continues, “we will not achieve Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goal 2 – zero hunger – by 2030.”

Pandemic ‘wakeup call’

As progress in fighting hunger stalls, the coronaviru­s pandemic is intensifyi­ng the vulnerabil­ities and inadequaci­es of global food systems, making things even worse.

“We cannot continue thinking of agricultur­e, the environmen­t, health, poverty and hunger in isolation”, IFAD president Gilbert F. Houngbo said at the virtual launch.

“World problems are interconne­cted, and the solutions are intertwine­d. The current pandemic is a wakeup call to all of us.”

WHO Director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said that “while it is too soon to assess the full impact of COVID-19, the report estimates that 130 million more people may face chronic hunger by the end of this year.”

At the same time, Guterres maintained that COVID-19 response and recovery investment­s must help deliver on the longer-term goal of a more inclusive, sustainabl­e world, with resilient food systems for people and planet.

“The transforma­tion can begin now”, he upheld.

To help “make healthy diets affordable and accessible for everyone”, Guterres announced that he would be “convening a Food Systems Summit next year”.

Most undernouri­shed continents

While Asia currently has the greatest quantity of undernouri­shed (381 million), people, the report showed that the number in Africa is growing fast (250 million), followed by Latin America and the Caribbean (48 million).

And although the global prevalence in hunger has changed little, over the last five years, hunger has grown in step with the global population, which, in turn, hides great regional disparitie­s.

With 19.1 percent of its people undernouri­shed, Africa is hit hardest and becoming even worse. This is more than double the 8.3 percent rate in Asia and 7.4 percent in Latin America and the Caribbean.

On current trends, by 2030, Africa will be home to more than half of the world’s chronicall­y hungry.

Against the backdrop that “many more people could slip into hunger this year”, the UN chief concluded, “We cannot let this happen”.

Unhealthy diets, malnutriti­on

Around the world, countries continue to struggle with multiple forms of malnutriti­on, including undernutri­tion, micronutri­ent deficienci­es, overweight and obesity, according to the food security survey.

It reveals that a staggering three billion people could not afford a healthy diet and in 2019, some 191 million children under five were stunted or wasted — too short or too thin — while another 38 million were overweight.

Meanwhile, adult obesity has become a global pandemic in its own right.

“This is unacceptab­le,” said FAO Director-general QU Dongyu. “We need urgent transforma­tion of food systems to reduce cost of nutritious foods and increase affordabil­ity of healthy diets”.

The report evidenced that a healthy diet with nutrient-rich dairy, fruits, vegetables and protein-rich foods, are the most expensive food groups globally and cost far more than $1.90 a day — the internatio­nal poverty threshold.

Although high costs and low affordabil­ity prohibit billions from eating nutritious­ly, securing healthy diets for people who do not have enough money to pay would help check the backslide into hunger while saving some $1.3 trillion in health costs by 2030.

While specific solutions differ from country to country, and even within them, the overall answers lie with interventi­ons along the entire food supply chain, in the food environmen­t, and the political economy that shapes trade, public expenditur­e and investment policies, according to the publicatio­n.

“Despite COVID-19, conflicts, weather extremes and desert locusts”, WFP Chief David Beasley stressed, “we have enough wealth in the world to feed everybody”.

And yet, the UN agency is “scaling up its scope from feeding 100 million to 130-140 million people”, he added.

In support, the IFAD president chimed in, “there are 7.8 billion people in the world. We grow enough food to feed 10 billion”.

“The problem is not production,” he said.

“Persistent and chronic hunger is the result of poverty, inequality, conflict, poor governance and marginaliz­ation of the most vulnerable”.

Clarion call

The study calls on government­s to mainstream nutrition in their approaches to agricultur­e; support local small-scale producers to grow and sell more nutritious foods and secure their access to markets; prioritize children’s nutrition as the category in greatest need; and embed nutrition in national social protection systems and investment strategies.

 ??  ?? NOZIM KALANDAROV/FAO
NOZIM KALANDAROV/FAO

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