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News, May 2008

 

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Editorial Note: The following news reports are summaries from original sources. They may also include corrections of Arabic names and political terminology. Comments are in parentheses.

 

World leaders meet in Rome, on soaring food prices

www.chinaview.cn 2008-06-03 15:48:20  

  ·World leaders gathered in Rome Tuesday to seek ways of tackling soaring food prices. ·The summit was hosted by the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). ·Main topics on agenda: rising food prices, climate change, increasing production of biofuels.

    ROME, June 3 (Xinhua) --

    World leaders gathered here Tuesday for a three-day summit, seeking ways of tackling soaring food prices and helping millions of people in the fight against hunger.

    The summit, hosted by the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), is the first global response to the recent cycle of food prices hike.

    It is aimed at winning donor pledges for urgent aid as short-term solutions and generating longer-term strategies to safeguard food production.

    The main topics on the agenda are rising food prices, climate change and the increasing production of biofuels, with the last set to spark controversies.

UN chief maps out twin-track strategy to tackle soaring food prices

www.chinaview.cn 2008-06-03 16:32:35  

  ·Ban said the int'l community must take steps to increase food availability to vulnerable people. ·Ban called on developed countries to help poor countries expand food assistance. ·UN chief warned against food export restrictions imposed by certain countries.

    ROME, June 3 (Xinhua) --

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon mapped out a twin-track strategy to tackle soaring food prices as world leaders opened a three-day summit here Tuesday in a global response to the food crisis.

    "You all know about the severity and scale of the global food crisis. Before this emergency, more than 850 million people in the world were short of food," Ban told the summit, hosted by the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).

    The high-level conference comes as the world is experiencing a dramatic increase in food prices.

    Agricultural commodity prices rose sharply in the past two years and continued to rise even more sharply in the first three months of 2008, with foodstuffs such as rice, corn and wheat all reaching record highs, sparking riots in many countries and worsening the situation of the 850 million people already affected by chronic hunger.

    A joint report by the FAO and the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) warned last week that food prices were expected to remain high over the next decade even if they would ease from their recent peaks.

    In a twin-track strategy, Ban said the international community must take immediate steps to increase food availability to vulnerable people as a short-term response.

    He called on developed countries to help poor countries expand food assistance through food aid, vouchers or cash, scale up nutritional support and improve safety nets and social protection programs to help the most vulnerable.

    Small farmers' food production should be urgently boosted by distributing seeds and fertilizers in time for this year's planting seasons, Ban said.

    Some actions have been taken at international level to meet immediate needs.

    The World Bank announced last week the establishment of a 1.2 billion U.S. dollars' financing facility to boost food production, including 200 million U.S. dollars in grants targeted at the world's poorest countries.

    The FAO also called for 1.7 billion U.S. dollars in new funding to provide low-income countries with seeds and other agricultural support.

    The UN chief in particular warned against food export restrictions imposed by certain countries in the face of higher food prices on the global markets to ensure domestic supply.

    "Some countries have taken action by limiting exports or by imposing price controls... They only distort markets and force prices even higher," Ban said.

    "I call on nations to resist such measures and to immediately release exports designated for humanitarian purposes," he added.

    Ban also urged developed countries to open markets for agricultural products from developing countries and eliminate subsidies to farmers, a thorny issue hindering the World Trade Organization (WTO) Doha Round negotiations.

    The international community must act for longer resilience and contribute to global food security by "eliminating trade and taxation policies that distort markets, not least through rapid resolution of the Doha Round," he said.

    Developing countries have long complained about heavily subsidized food from Europe and the United States being dumped on their markets, damaging their own farmers.

    Ban said the world needs a dramatic increase in food production to feed people and higher food prices provide an historic opportunity to revitalize agriculture, especially in countries where productivity gains have been low in recent years.

    "The world needs to produce more food," he said. "Food production needs to rise by 50 percent by the year 2030 to meet the rising demand."

    In the long term, Ban said investment in agriculture, especially in developing countries, was vital to ensure global food security.

    "These are parallel tracks -- immediate needs must not be met at the expense of long-term solutions," he said.

    On the more controversial issue of biofuels, Ban said the international community should reach a greater degree of consensus.

    An FAO report said the growth of biofuel production is a factor contributing to higher food prices, a claim denied by major producers such as the United States, the European Union and Brazil.

Ahmadinejad: Iran has plans for fair distribution of food worldwide

www.chinaview.cn 2008-06-03 16:49:24  

    TEHRAN, June 3 (Xinhua) --

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said on Tuesday that his country has clear strategies, proposals and plans for fair and appropriate distribution of food worldwide, the official IRNA news agency reported.

    Ahmadinejad made the remarks in a speech before leaving for Rome, Italy to attend a Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)-sponsored UN food summit, said IRNA.

    "As an influential country in economic and agriculture terms, Iran has clear-cut strategies, proposals and plans for fair and appropriate production and distribution of foodstuff worldwide and it can have a determining role in management of affairs in the globe today," Ahmadinejad was quoted as saying.

    He revealed that he would have meetings with a number of world leaders on the sideline of the FAO summit, without specifying whom he will meet.

    Participants at the three-day summit beginning on Tuesday will discuss short-term solutions as well as new strategies to deal with the effects of global warming, growing demand for biofuels and a crumbling agriculture sector in much of the developing world.

    The summit is the first global response to the recent cycle of food prices hike.

    Ahmadinejad has visited UN headquarters in New York three times for the UN General Assembly, but visits by the hardline Iranian president to a Western country are extremely rare.

    Italian activists, leftist politicians and Jewish groups have protested against Ahmadinejad's presence at the summit, saying it was a disgrace that someone who has repeatedly predicted Israel will disappear was invited. 

Editor: An Lu

 

 


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