Olympics Hunger Summit To Unite World Leaders, Athletes To Tackle Issue

 

 

 

 

 

There’s one final Olympics event few may know about.

 

On Sunday, British Prime Minister David Cameron will host a hunger summit at 10 Downing Street with world leaders focused on tackling childhood hunger.

“We are thinking about the next medal, but there are millions of children around the world thinking, ‘Am I going to get my next meal?'” Cameron told ITV1’s Daybreak.

Gold medalist Mo Farah, who was born in Somalia, will also attend. And athletes such as David Beckham, a Unicef ambassador, have already been to Downing Street to campaign about hunger issues.

Earlier this year, nonprofit Save the Children urged Cameron to hold a “world hunger summit” during the London Olympics following a report in which the charity revealed the high rates of child malnutrition around the world.

The charity cited rising food prices and a lack of global investment in tackling malnutrition as roadblocks to fighting the issue.

 

“Every hour of every day, 300 children die because of malnutrition, often simply because they don’t have access to the basic, nutritious foods that we take for granted in rich countries,” Justin Forsyth, the chief executive of Save the Children, told the Press Association. “By acting on hunger and malnutrition, world leaders have the chance to change this for millions of children across the world.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Following Cameron’s May announcement of the summit, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation also released a statement calling upon the forthcoming summit to focus on investments in agriculture:

 

 

“We hope this event will build on the momentum generated by President Barack Obama’s increased commitment to nutrition and smallholder farmer productivity announced at the G8 last week. By making long-term investments in agriculture, the private sector, governments, and the wider development community can help reduce hunger and poverty, and build self-sufficiency for millions of poor farming families.”

With numerous world leaders, charities and athletes present, Cameron has said it’s necessary to use the Olympics to spotlight hunger issues.

Andrew Mitchell, the International Development Secretarytold BBC Radio 4’s Today program that Britain — along with Brazil, the 2016 Olympics host city, see a long-term role for the games to fight child hunger.

 

“It’s a chance for Britain, together with the next hosts of the Olympics –- the Brazilians -– to put a real flag in the sand about the importance of tackling malnutrition in the future.”

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The G8 and Africa’s Food Security – Time to Scale Up, Speed Up and Invest Up

In the lead up to the G8 Summit, AGRA stood with U.S. President Barak Obama and African heads of state to mark the launch of the next phase of our shared commitment to achieving global food security.

Focused on engaging the private sector in funding agricultural development, this initiative presents a new opportunity to find practical solutions to the devastating food crises that still plague Africa.

We have achieved common consensus on what needs to be done – what smallholder farmers in Ghana and the rest of the continent need: supportive policies, better seeds, access to finance, fertilizers, skills development and extension services, national research systems, and market infrastructure.

Early results, based on AGRA’s efforts to meet these needs over the last five years, are very encouraging.

Due to the collective efforts of African governments, the global donor community including the G8, research institutions, the private sector, farmers’ organizations and NGOs, we have seen remarkable progress – but now we must redouble our efforts.

At L’Aquila G8 countries stepped up, following Camp David they must scale up, speed up and invest up.

We are at a critical turning point. To make the most of recent momentum, G8 leaders, African governments and the private sector need to take the following steps to deliver lasting food-security solutions.

First G8 countries, African governments and the private sector need to put in place measures to ensure money is effectively dispersed.

Multi-billion dollar commitments hold great promise, but only if they reach the farmers, researchers, agro-dealers, extension workers and others who are building Africa’s agricultural economy. Realistic pledges with meaningful accountability are absolutely necessary.

Second, international and African governments need to build structures that funnel funds to agriculture’s private sector economic development.

Given the private-sector focus of the new initiative, it is critically important to scale up mechanisms, such as the Africa Enterprise Challenge Fund (AECF), that permit funding through the private sector or other non-state actors such as AGRA and farmers’ organizations.

Currently, funding continues to be channeled almost exclusively through public institutions. We need to provide support that will enable investment to go where it is most likely to be used properly and profitably within Africa’s private sector.

Third, we must listen to the smallholder farmer and small agri-business owners across Africa.

They are the experts, tirelessly working to move the continent forward. They will tell us what they need on the ground to be successful.

AGRA supports an approach that is coordinated globally, but is African led and focused on smallholder farmers.

This approach must be equitable, transparent and accountable to the satisfaction of all stakeholders.

As the dust settles on the recent G8 Summit, I hope the leaders AGRA met at Camp David and those we continue to meet across the continent will fund their commitments and take the bold action necessary to feed future generations.

*The writer is President of the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa*

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