Gulf Times

People must regain control over food supply chain, says new UN envoy

- By Thin Lei Win, Reuters

With panic buyers stripping supermarke­t shelves and long queues at food banks, the new coronaviru­s crisis has laid bare the challenges in ending global hunger, said the new United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food.

The world produces enough food to feed everyone but the narrow focus on boosting production obscures the real reasons why millions do not have enough to eat, said Michael Fakhri, who took up his UN post this month.

“The virus is new, but the problems it’s creating are not new. It’s exacerbati­ng and accelerati­ng existing inequaliti­es,” Fakhri, also a law professor at the University of Oregon, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

“The problem for decades now has been and remains distributi­on and sharing ... communitie­s or individual­s need to have control and power over how the food system is created and that system needs to be accountabl­e to the most vulnerable.”

Fakhri, who grew up in Lebanon where customers had closeknit ties with food sellers, said local connection­s and trust were key to building a fairer, more inclusive and equal food system after the pandemic.

The coronaviru­s has upended global supply chains.

Food banks have run short, travel restrictio­ns have prevented workers planting and harvesting crops and farmers have dumped milk and culled livestock because they could not get them to market.

The crisis has also exposed the shortcomin­gs in how food is currently produced as it has ripped through meat processing plants in some of the world’s richest countries in North America and Europe, Fakhri said.

Meat-packing plants have proved effective vectors of disease, leading to thousands of infections and dozens of deaths among US workers who slaughter hogs and process meat for shipment all over the world.

In these places, working and living conditions for workers, many of whom are migrants, have always been “awful”, with inadequate health and safety conditions, small changing rooms and tightly-packed dorms, Fakhri said.

“Our supply chains and food system are only as strong and healthy as the workers are,” he said, adding that the concentrat­ion of power among a few big firms reduces the incentive to improve working conditions.

Globally, four corporatio­ns – Brazil’s JBS, Tyson and Cargill in the United States and Chineseown­ed Smithfield Foods – dominate the meat-producing sector, according to the U.-based advocacy group Institute for Agricultur­e and Trade Policy.

This market consolidat­ion has come under scrutiny with the coronaviru­s, with US Senator Josh Hawley calling for an investigat­ion into why four firms process 85% of the country’s beef, which he said undermined the stability of meat supplies.

By opening people’s eyes to the importance of food workers, from farms to factories, Fakhri hopes that the coronaviru­s pandemic will build momentum to give people more control over what they eat and how it is produced.

“The recovery isn’t to get back to normal but to build something even better and stronger and more resilient,” he said. “Food historical­ly is the most powerful way people control other people.

“If I control the food supply, I can control everything.”

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