Morkporkpor Anku,
GNA Special Correspondent to Rio De Janeiro, Brazil.
Rio de Janeiro (Brazil), June 21,
GNA - There are 1.3 billion people living in extreme poverty and close to 900
million chronically undernourished globally.
Another one
billion suffer from “hidden hunger”, a lack of vitamins and minerals.
A statement
issued jointly by the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization, the
International Fund for Agricultural Development, the World Food Programme and
Bioversity International in Rio de Janeiro on Wednesday has said.
The statement was
issued in connection with the United Nations conference on Sustainable
development dubbed “RIO + 20 conference” underway in Rio de Janeiro, brazil.
It said
undernourishment in children prevented them from ever reaching their full
physical and cognitive potential, costing lives, livelihoods and economic
growth.
“We must all
understand that the Rio vision of sustainable development cannot be achieved as
long as hunger and extreme poverty persist,” it noted.
It will require
not just universal acceptance of the right of every person to be free from
hunger, but also profound changes in the way we produce and consume food and
manage the earth's resources.
It said Rio+20
gives us a golden opportunity to bring together the agendas of food security
and sustainable development to build the future we want.
According to the
statement Rio+20 must demonstrate the political will to improve governance,
reform policy and, above all, take action to fight hunger.
“All our efforts
toward "sustainable development" will be in vain if we cannot feed
humanity and also safeguard the resources upon which life depends,” it added.
It said it was
shared challenge that involved actions that must be undertaken by government,
the private sector and civil society, and producers and consumers of food
themselves.
The statement
said the world now faced the challenge of raising global food production by 60
per cent by 2050 while managing the natural resource base so that we are not
robbing future generations.
It said the
principles of inclusiveness, equity, gender equality and a rights-based
approach must be upheld both in the consultative process and the actions
undertaken.
It called for the
scaling up of safety nets and building resilient livelihoods and landscapes, to
ensure access to adequate and nutritious food at all times for the poorest and
most vulnerable people in both rural and urban areas.
“Disaster risk
management and resilience-building need to be adopted by food-insecure
countries and communities exposed to increasing land degradation and resource
scarcity,” the statement said.


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