Guterres calls for hope, action to tackle global food crisis

Anjali Sharma

GG News Bureau

UNITED NATIONS, 17th Oct. Head of the UN Food and Agriculture Organization on Friday stressed the need to “harness the power of solidarity and collective action” to build a sustainable world with enough to eat for everyone to tackle the growing hunger crisis.

Director-General QU Dongyu at the ceremony held in FAO Headquarters in Rome, declared that with food security worsening, and risk of serious levels of hunger in Asia and Africa at an all-time high, the world must “leave no one behind”.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres in a message said it was taking place “at a challenging moment for global food security”.

He said that 3 billion people cannot afford a healthy diet; the war in Ukraine has triggered surging food, fertilizer, and energy prices; and the most vulnerable are being battered by the pandemic, climate crisis, environmental degradation, conflict, and deepening inequalities.

“The number of people affected by hunger has more than doubled in the past three years”, he said.

Guterres added that “almost a million people are living in famine conditions, with starvation and death a daily reality”.

He referred to this year’s these Leave no one behind. Better production, better nutrition, a better environment, and a better life, Mr. Guterres said that farmers need to access reasonably priced fertilizers to ensure enough food next year.

SG called Governments, scientists, and civil society need to work together to make nutritious diets available and affordable for everyone and financial institutions must increase support to developing countries.

“Together, we must move from despair to hope and action” he said. “On World Food Day and every day, I call on you to be part of the change”.

He reiterated that the commemoration took place at a time when global food security faces multiple threats, pushing food, energy and fertilizer prices sky high amidst climate crisis and long-standing conflicts.

The effect of COVID continues to highlight how interconnected economies and lives have become, as 970,000 people risk famine in Afghanistan, Ethiopia, Somalia, South Sudan and Yemen, FAO stated.

FAO’s latest The State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World report illuminates that hunger worldwide is on the rise.

A message read on behalf of Pope Francis reminded that people “are not just numbers, data or an endless stream of statistics”.

Alvaro Lario, President of the International Fund for Agricultural Development said the day should be a call to ramp up action to “help small-scale farmers in rural areas, who supply food to their communities and countries despite inequality, vulnerability, and poverty”.

World Food Programme chief David Beasley described the food availability crisis as his “gravest concern”, saying “the world must open its eyes to this unprecedented global food crisis and act now to stop it spinning out of control”.

The events in Rome included an exhibit featuring photos taken from space by European Space Agency astronaut and FAO Goodwill Ambassador Thomas Pesquet highlighted the climate crisis.

FAO’s Achievement Awards were handed out to people whose actions are transforming agrifood systems, and a Junior World Food Day event was held with a host of Food Heroes.

Awareness-raising events on the global fight against hunger will continue to take centre stage in the coming week.

FAO’s Hand in Hand initiative continues to work to accelerate agrifood system transformation by eradicating povertyended hunger, and reducing inequalities.

It aims to promote decent rural employment, foster gender equality, social protection, end child labour, and support rural and Indigenous Peoples custodians of much of the earth’s biodiversity.

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