|
World
suffering food crisis: UN
Foreign Desk Report
MANILA—A senior UN official said Friday there was a global food crisis
after meeting the Philippine president to discuss the impact of soaring
prices, which have triggered unrest in dozens of countries.
“There is a world food crisis,” said Kevin Cleaver, an assistant
president in a department of the UN International Fund for Agricultural
Development, who met with President Gloria Arroyo in Manila.
The Philippines is one of the world’s largest rice importers and the
government is striving to avoid shortages as worldwide concern grows
about sharp increases in food prices.
Cleaver said that “in some 33 countries there is now civil disturbance,
food riots caused by food shortages and higher prices. This is one of
the subjects we discussed.”
Analysts have warned that higher prices could trigger unrest in the
Philippines, following rioting in countries such as Haiti and Egypt.
Cleaver said people were suffering because the “price of rice and food
has increased and we discussed a little bit what to do about that,”
adding he and Arroyo had agreed the solution was to ramp up production.
The president has pledged to keep supplies of the staple grain available
to every Filipino, drafting in the military to distribute supplies and
cracking down on looters and hoarders.
The president said the government had a plan for better irrigation
facilities, according to Cleaver. That would help in the coming year but
the shorter-term problem was more difficult to cure, he said.
He added that the world had been taken by surprise because “most people
have been complacent,” but said governments can take steps to avoid
starvation.
Cleaver said the UN agency would finance a 66-million-dollar
agricultural and rural development programme for two of the poorest
regions in the Philippines.
The International Rice Research Institute warned Friday that rice prices
were likely to keep rising for some time as production fails to keep up
with soaring demand.
Cleaver said people were suffering because the “price of rice and food
has increased and we discussed a little bit what to do about that,”
adding he and Arroyo had agreed the solution was to ramp up production.
|