The United Nations plans to establish a task force to tackle the
global food crisis to avert "social unrest on an unprecedented scale,"
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said.
Ban, who will lead
the task force, said its first priority will be to meet the $755
million shortfall in funding for the World Food Program.
"Without
full funding of these emergency requirements, we risk again the specter
of widespread hunger, malnutrition and social unrest on an
unprecedented scale," he told reporters in the Swiss capital, Bern,
where the U.N. agency chiefs have been meeting.
"We anticipate that additional funding will be required," he said.
The
skyrocketing cost of food staples, stoked by rising fuel prices,
unpredictable weather and demand from India and China, has already
sparked sometimes violent protests in the Caribbean, Africa and Asia.
Ban added that new measures must also go beyond the usual approach of simply providing emergency food relief when crises hit.
"In
addition to increasing food prices, we see at the same time farmers in
developing countries planting less, producing less, due to the
escalating cost of fertilizer and energy," he said. "We must make every
effort to support those farmers so that in the coming year we do not
see even more severe food shortages."
To that end, the U.N.'s
Food and Agriculture Organization has developed a $1.7 billion plan to
provide seeds for farmers in the world's poorest countries, Ban said.
World
Bank President Robert Zoellick said 100 million people are estimated to
have been pushed into poverty over the past two years.
"This
crisis isn't over once the emergency needs are met," said Zoellick, who
also attended the meeting. "We can't just replay this year after year
after year."
He said $475 million has already been pledged to WFP but that more is needed.
"The world can afford this," said Zoellick. "I think we've now got the attention of the world community."
He
also praised Ukraine for lifting its ban on exporting food and urged
other countries to do the same because countries had to think of the
global needs.
Associated Press writers Alexander G. Higgins and Frank Jordans in Geneva contributed to this report.
Source: Associated Press
http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5jtFqRVL1zLJZWOfQuDRQ-ihVYBOgD90BFCQ01
|