G8 unfurls 20 billion dollar boost for food production
Barack Obama and fellow rich nation leaders unveiled a 20 billion
dollar fund to help feed the developing world on Friday as they were
urged to help the poor survive the downturn.
On the last day of the G8 summit in Italy, the US president and his
peers tried to answer criticism they had turned their backs on those
most vulnerable to the global economic crisis and held talks with
African leaders.
As Obama prepared to embark on his first visit to sub-Saharan Africa,
delegates said he played a key role in persuading around 30 countries to
bankroll a fund aimed at helping smallholder farmers increase crop
yields.
Initially expected to total 15 billion dollars, Obama said that
figure had now reached 20 billion.The United States will reportedly
stump up around 3.5 billion dollars of the cash and Japan and the
European Union between three and four billion each.
“We have committed to investing 20 billion in food security,
agricultural development programmes to help fight world hunger. This is
in addition to the aid we provide,” said Obama.
“Going into the meeting we had agreed to 15 billion. We exceeded that
mark and obtained an additional five billion of hard commitments.”The
fund signifies a shift in focus by richer nations away from food aid
towards practical help for local agriculture.
“We believe that the purpose of aid must be to create the conditions
where it’s no longer needed to help people become self-sufficient,
provide for their families, and lift their standards of living,” said
Obama.Kanayo Nwanze, head of UN agricultural agency IFAD, was among
those who welcomed the launch, saying the plan represented a “shift from
food aid — which is like providing medication after the child is ill —
to providing assistance to help the countries... produce food by
themselves.”
British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said there was an urgent need for
action to combat the hunger “that is now gripping over a billion people”
worldwide.
“It’s unacceptable that today people should go hungry in a climate as
fertile as ours,” he said.
Aid agency Oxfam had initially bemoaned the amount of time devoted to
Africa at the summit but later changed its tune, saying G8 and other
leaders had “upped their game today.”“Much of this funding is recycled,
but the new money makes a downpayment on eliminating hunger,” said
spokesman Gawain Kripke.
Irish pop star Bono, a longtime Africa aid campaigner, hailed Obama’s
contribution.“Of all the enemies of civilisation, hunger is the dumbest,
the most mocking of all we hold true,” said the U2 frontman.
At the talks between the African leaders and the G8, veteran Egyptian
President Hosni Mubarak called for a freeze of repayments on loans to
African countries to help them weather the downturn.Mubarak asked the
rich countries to “arrange a temporary freeze on African debt” and to
extend credit to the continent on preferential rates.
Obama, whose father was Kenyan, and his wife Michelle, a descendant
of African slaves, left for Ghana later Friday on the first visit to
sub-Saharan Africa by a black US president.
However before flying out from Rome just after 6:30 pm (1630 GMT),
they travelled to the Vatican for their first audience with Pope
Benedict XVI.
Meanwhile, hundreds of Italian carabinieri police deployed along the
route of a march by anti-globalisation protesters towards the summit
venue.
Around 5,000 anti-globalisation protesters and local residents set
off from Paganica, where one of dozens of tented camps have been set up
to house victims of the devastating April 6 earthquake, but there were
no reports of violence.
“We are all residents of L’Aquila,” chanted demonstrators, some of
whom brandished banners proclaiming “Quake G8”.The three-day summit was
dominated by the global downturn and disagreements over how to meet
greenhouse gas emissions targets.
On Thursday, Obama said the world’s biggest economies had reached a
“historic consensus” on cutting pollution, saying rich nations had a
duty to set an example, as the leaders also agreed to shun
protectionism.
- AFP
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