Can the United States do more to fight world hunger?

President Obama said recently he will work with Congress to double US support for global food security to over $ 1 billion. What does this mean for the 963 million people in the world who do not have enough to eat? (963 million is more than the populations of the USA, Canada and the EU combined.)

At present, there are between 350 and 400 million children in the world who are suffering from hunger.

It’s not enough. The World Food Programme, which is the United Nations frontline agency in the fight against global, provides food assistance to about 100 million people in 80 countries every year. It’s the world’s largest humanitarian organization.

WFP needs about $6 billion in 2009 to meet the needs of those 100 million and it depends on the United States as its largest donor to meet about 40% of those needs.

The US made an extraordinary effort in 2008, providing WFP over $2 billion in contributions. But current US food aid budget appropriations for fiscal year 2009 can only sustain a US contribution of about $1.3 billion this year.

Let’s take a closer look. In our world:

  • 25,000 people (adults and children) die every day from hunger and related causes.
  • More than 60 percent of chronically hungry people are women.
  • Every six seconds a child dies because of hunger and related causes.

The number of undernourished people in the world increased by 75 million in 2007 and 40 million in 2008, largely due to higher food prices.

Hunger is not caused by a shortage of food. In fact there has never existed such an abundance of food, yet 963 million people in the world go hungry. Read about what causes hunger here: http://www.wfp.org/hunger/causes

The economic stimulus passed by the US Congress earlier this year included $20 billion in additional funding for food and nutrition programs for the economically vulnerable in the United States. This is good and right. No one should go hungry in the richest country in the world. The question is, can we Americans and citizens of other rich countries dig deeper during this time of economic challenge? If the US provided a little under a billion more in new food assistance we could continue to sustain our commitment at a $2 billion level during this fiscal year. Are you willing to write to your Congressman, or Senator, or Member of Parliament to make sure your country continues a high level of financial support to global food assistance programs?

You can also help fight world hunger this Mother’s Day by feeding a hungry child in your mother’s name.

Women and Climate Change

“I am 60 years old and I have never experienced so much flooding, droughts hot winds and hailstones as in recent years . . . I am surprised how often we have these problems. Whatever the cause, more crops are failing and production is lower.”
Chandrika Tiwari, Nepal

Climate change is affecting everyone, whether they realize it or not. But it is women like Chandrika who are suffering the most, simply because they are women, and women are poorer. Women make up 70 percent of the world’s poor. This is true even in the United States where the gap in poverty rates between men and women is wider than anywhere else in the Western world. Here in the United States in 2007, 13.8 percent of females were poor compared to 11.1 percent of men. The current economic crisis has only worsened this situation. Throughout the world, women have less access to financial resources, land, education, health, and other basic rights than men and are seldom involved in decision-making processes. This makes them less able to cope with the impact of climate change and less able to adapt.

This vulnerability can be seen most tragically following a natural disaster like a hurricane, a cyclone or a flood when the mortality rates are reviewed.  Almost always, significantly more females die than males. The reasons they die are well understood. Warning information is often transmitted by men to men in public spaces, but rarely communicated to the rest of the family. Long skirts hamper running and swimming.  Many women have never had an opportunity to learn to swim or to climb trees. In some cultures women are not allowed to leave the house without a father, husband or brother to accompany them, so they wait for their relatives to return to take them to a safe place.  Women tend to stay behind in order to look after children and the elderly and to protect property. In rescue efforts in some countries, boys are given preference over women and girls.

What is not well understood is that women have important knowledge and skills that can help their communities to both adapt to climate change and to mitigate its effects.  It’s a fact that when women are given access to resources and training and allowed to participate in community decision-making – the whole community benefits.  Here are some examples of adaptation and mitigation of climate change from around the world that succeeded because women participated.

The municipality of La Masica in Honduras did not have any fatalities from Hurricane Mitch on 1998. This outcome can be directly attributed to a process of community preparedness that began six months prior to the disaster. The project involved the establishment of local organizations in charge of risk and disaster management, training in geographical mapping of hazards and an early warning system. Men and women were equally involved with all of these efforts. When the hurricane struck the municipality was prepared and vacated the area promptly, thus avoiding deaths.

The country of Mali is two-thirds desert. 90 per cent of the country’s energy needs are met by burning wood and charcoal. As a result, deforestation is intensifying and desertification is accelerating. Loss of wood cover is intensifying erosion, which in turn makes the soil poorer for farming, and exposes loose soil that is more vulnerable to flood.  Flooding happens more often with the heavy rains, and this is seen as partly due to climate change. The Sinsibere project works to reduce desertification by developing sustainable sources of income for rural women as an alternative to their commerce in wood. These alternative livelihoods include vegetable gardens and making shea butter products like soap. After six years, 80 per cent of the participating women no longer cut wood for commercial purposes, or have substantially reduced their woodcutting.

Béni Khédache in Tunisia is a mountainous and dry region, vulnerable to drought in summer and sometimes-torrential rain and landslides in winter.  A wide-ranging sustainable environmental resource management project was undertaken. The project was comprised of numerous initiatives tackling desertification, water stress and erosion, through a variety of methods often based on traditional knowledge. The participation of women was particularly important for identifying local knowledge for reducing desertification.  Techniques included rainwater harvesting, innovative irrigation, and increasing the area’s biodiversity and plant cover.  The initiative worked to reduce risks of hazards likely to be exacerbated by climate change, such as desertification, and landslides triggered by extreme weather.

A collective of 5,000 women spread across 75 villages in southern India is now offering chemical-free, non-irrigated, organic agriculture as one method of combating global warming.  The women follow a system of interspersing crops that do not need extra water, chemical inputs or pesticides for production on arid, degraded lands that they have been regenerated with help from an organization called the Deccan Development Society.

Women in wealthy nations have a role to play too.  While everyone should take action to reduce climate change, those of us who live in wealthy nations have an even greater responsibility because our lifestyle, our disproportionate consumption of resources is largely responsible for the problem. The people of the United States make up five percent of the world’s population, but are responsible for 25 per cent of annual green house emissions. Women can play an important role in lowering this number by making three changes in their families’ lifestyle.

  • Switch to fuel efficient automobiles and use public transportation more often.
  • Eat less meat.  Give up meat for one day per week, initially, and decrease it from there.  Worldwide livestock farming generates 18% of the planet’s greenhouse gas emissions.
  • Switch to energy-saving compact fluorescent light bulbs in your home. If every household replaced just three 60-watt incandescent bulbs with CF bulbs, the pollution savings would be like taking 3.5 million cars off the road!

Pakistani Women Protest Violence Against Women

Photo:Arif Ali/AFP

Pakistani women, reacting to the public flogging of a seventeen year old girl in the Swat valley protested in Lahore, on April 4.

On April 6, Pakistan’s top judge ordered a court hearing into the public flogging of the girl, filmed on an a cell phone. See: FRONTLINE: Where women are flogged… | PBS

The recently restored chief justice, Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry, summoned senior government officials before a special eight-judge bench in response to public outrage over the video, which shows a bearded militant whipping the screaming girl 34 times.

Chaand Bibi the girl at the center of the controversy did not appear in court, although ordered to do so and has denied being the burqa clad figure in the video. The Taliban control the area where she lives and claim that it is their right to thrash women, so her denial is understandable.

Meanwhile, the man who filmed the Taliban flogging has said that the treatment meted out to the girl was actually a “punishment” for her refusing a marriage proposal from a militant. This is consistant with reports coming out of Swat that the Taliban have ordered families to declare in the mosques if they have unmarried daughters so that they can be married off to militants. Families who do not comply have been threatened with “dire consequences.”

Taliban Aim to Take Over Pakistan

Pakistani Taliban expand influence beyond Swat | csmonitor.com.

The Taliban blew uo over 170 schools in Swat

The Taliban blew up over 170 schools in Swat

In the same week that the Pakistani Taliban secured their demand for Islamic law in the Swat Valley, they moved into a neighboring district and won the right to preach in mosques there. This success in Buner came with little fighting – unlike in Swat, where they’d battled government forces on and off since 2007.

The move suggests that the Taliban, having gained a foothold in Swat, intend to spread their influence more broadly in Pakistan – and may face little resistance in some areas.

This is bad new for the women and girls who live there.  Here’s a quick review of what life is like for women and girls under the Taliban.

  • The Taliban forces women to wear the burqa outside the home and to be accompanied by a male blood relative. The burqa is a garment that completely covers the body, including the face. They say the face of a women is a source of corruption for men not related to them.  Women who cannot afford a burqa or do not have a male relative either stay imprisoned in their homes or risk punishment by going out.
  • The Taliban requires that all ground and first floor residential windows should be painted over or screened to prevent women being visible from the street.
  • Women are forbidden to speak loudly or laugh as no stranger should hear a woman’s voice.
  • The Taliban does not allow girls to go to school.
  • Boys may attend special religious schools where they are indoctrinated by the Taliban and trained as warriors to fight the West.
  • The Taliban does not allow women to work.
  • The Taliban does not allow women to be treated by male doctors, and since female doctors are not allowed to work, women under the Taliban have little or no access to medical care.
  • Women face harsh physical punishment for breaking any of these rules.

The government of Pakistan seems unable to stop the spread of the Taliban and justify compromising with them by claiming that the local populations want the Taliban to impose their fanatical brand of Sharia. In reality, the local population is terrified of opposing the Taliban because they know that their government can’t protect them. The Taliban hunts down and brutally kills anyone who opposes them. Vicious reprisals against members of the local tribal militia that tried to protect Buner are already underway.

Swat and neighboring Buner are about sixty miles from the capital, Islamabad. Pakistan, which possesses nuclear weapons, is in danger of falling completely to the Taliban. The United States is responding to this threat by intensifying predator drone attacks inside Pakistan.  The only visable effect these attacks  seem to be having, is to aid Taliban recruitment efforts. It’s hard to know what the answer is.

FRONTLINE: Where women are flogged… | PBS

Everyone has probably seen this video on the internet by now.

Earlier this evening PBS aired, Children of the Taliban, on FRONTLINE here in New York. It was filmed in the part of Pakistan where the beating shown in the video above took place.

In the Swat Valley, where the Taliban now has a fearsome lockhold on one million people (thanks to a recent deal with the government allowing the militants to impose strict Sharia law) correspondent Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy meets two little girls. And they are unafraid to talk to her about what is happening.

Two interviews shown later in the program made my blood run cold. In the first, PBS correspondent Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy spoke with a young madrasa student about the place of women. The boy told her that according to the Quran, women are only for taking care of the home and should stay in the home. “Why are women wandering around on the streets”, he asked. Then he likened women to plastic bags, which have been banned in Pakistan. “You don’t see them anymore, do you? They should do the same with women.”

The other interview was with a Taliban official responsible for recruiting and training children. This man, who had the deadest eyes I have ever seen and was was almost zombie like, trains boys as young as four years old to handle weapons and explained that he would willingly sacrifice their lives to further the aims of the Taliban.

This 30 minute investigative report is memorable and should make any freedom loving people think hard about compromising with the Taliban in any way.

There is a reason for everything! Piracy in Somalia

To turn the tide on piracy in Somalia, bring justice to its fisheries | csmonitor.com

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We should be paying attention to this!!!

The problem of piracy in Somalia originated about a decade ago because of disgruntled fishermen.

The headless state had no authority to patrol its tuna-rich coastal waters and foreign commercial vessels swooped in to cast their nets. This proved a slap in the face for Somalis, who saw these vessels as illegal and raking in profits at the expense of the local impoverished population. To make matters worse, there were reports that some foreign ships even dumped waste in Somali waters.

That prompted local fishermen to attack foreign fishing vessels and demand compensation. The success of these early raids in the mid-1990s persuaded many young men to hang up their nets in favor of AK-47s. Making the coastal areas lucrative for local fishermen again could encourage pirates to return to legitimate livelihoods.

‘It’s a pirate’s life for me’

Africa’s future grows bleaker as drug shortages roll back the clock on beating AIDS

globeandmail.com: Drug shortages roll back the clock on beating AIDS in Africa

Children forage in e-waste dump

Children forage in e-waste dump

BLOEMFONTEIN, SOUTH AFRICA — Every two weeks, Evelyn Mapota haunts her local pharmacy, pleading for medicine to keep her daughter alive. And every two weeks, she is told to try again another day.

After five months of waiting, Mrs. Mapota feels a wave of fear whenever she hears little Thato cough or thinks she might be catching a cold. “I worry and I start panicking,” she says. “I have sleepless nights thinking about it.”

Five-year-old Thato is one of an estimated 15,000 people in Free State, a province in the centre of South Africa, who are waiting for anti-retroviral (ARV) drugs. About 30 are dying every day.

Two years ago, the picture was much different. Estimates of the number of people newly infected with HIV declined from 3 million in 2001 to 2.7 million in 2007, while access to treatment rose by 42%. This was an unprecedented gain. Now, drug shortages brought on by donor cutbacks resulting from the economic crisis are reversing much of the progress that was made in the last four years.

These drug shortages will have a devastating effect on the already weak economies of African nations. Without access to medicines, anti-retrovirals, many more of those who are HIV positive will contract full blown AIDS. Not only will they be unable to work, they will also require significant care from others. HIV/AIDS is the fastest way for a family to move from relative wealth to poverty. Families often take on extra work, sell assets, borrow money and take children, usually girls, out of school and use the school fees to pay for medical interventions and the girls for care giving and other household tasks. Each of these strategies provides a short-term solution, but makes the family worse off in the long term.

The drug shortages also mean that more people will die, and more children will be left orphaned. If children who are orphaned by AIDS are lucky, they are cared for by grandparents or other members of their extended family. Many though, are left to fend for themselves and face a future blighted by stigmatization, lack of education and poverty.