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International Women's Day 2000 - Media Coverage

 

18 March 2000, Rajasthan Patrika, Jaipur, Rajasthan, India

 

Women can play key role

in combating hunger

By P.N. Tiku

 

The United nations World Food Programme has renewed its commitment to ensure "women's well-being and their empowerment" through eradicating hunger and poverty.

 

Hunger and poverty affects women and men disproportionately both in conflict and more peaceful circumstances.  WFP's commitment to improve the condition of women is based on the fundamental premise that strengthening opportunities and options for women is the key to solving the problem of hunger and poverty.

 

"When we target women with food aid, we inevitably build household food security.  Women control the distribution of food within households.  We want to build on that role and use it to feed children and to create or strengthen economic development", says Mr. Pedro Medrano, Regional Manager for WFP in South Asia in New Delhi.

 

Founded in 1963 as the food arm of the United Nations, WFP is the world's largest international food aid organization, serving in 84countries.  WFP assists Governments in mobilising complementary support activities accessible to women such as projects to promote functional literacy, diversification of skills, savings schemes, acquisition of land, credit and production of higher valued and marketable products.

 

WFP has invested about $24 billion and more than 43 million tons of food to combat hunger, promote economic and social development, and provide relief assistance in emergencies throughout the world. It commits 60 per cent of country programme resources to target women an girls in countries which show serious disadvantages for women compared to men (25 per cent) as reflected in basic economic and social development indicators.

 

For India, WFP has provided more than $1 billion in food and development assistance since 1963.  During 1998, it generated $2.9 million for development activities.  After the Beijing Declaration in 1995, it spelt out the commitments in India through its strategy called "Enabling Development" which takes gender into consideration in its five strategic areas: health and nutrition, education and training, asset creation, disaster mitigation and sustainable livelihoods in degraded natural resource environments.  Over the years, WFP's more than 70 development projects have included supplementary feeding and supported forestry, livestock and dairy development, irrigation, and rural development activities.  Food aid has also been given for 14 emergency response operations.

 

Today, WFP India's five-year (1997-2002) country programme goals are to:

1.       improve nutrition and quality of life for the most vulnerable at critical times in their lives;

2.       make sustainable improvements in household food security for the poorest, especially for women and children, and invest funds in development for long-term security;

3.       strengthen channels for locally-produced food grains and support local entrepreneurship; and

4.       advocate for eco-restoration through participatory methods and development

In view of the fact that India is still classified by the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) as the low-income food-deficit country, WFP's programme focuses only on the hungry poor and most vulnerable. With more than 50 per cent of India's Scheduled Castes and Tribes living below the poverty line, the majority of WFP's beneficiaries are from these groups.  These groups often live in isolated rural areas and have little access to mainstream development or subsidized food from the public distribution system.

WFP also works to ensure that women activities help to gain better access to food, education, and involvement in community decisions. By placing food directly in the hands of women, WFP initiatives help in achieving objectives by setting aside funds that are invested in activities that directly benefit or are controlled by women and also by  using gender-sensitive planning in its programs.  These programmes are spread in 11 states, including Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, Orissa and Rajasthan.

India will gain with the continued WFP assistance as around 35 per cent of the country's populating - 320 million - are considered food insecure, consuming less than 80 per cent of minimum energy requirements.  Dr. M.S. Swaminathan, renowned agricultural scientist, in his keynote address at the international conference on "Nutrition and Food Securities" in New Delhi March 6 referred to the studies which show that on an average 10 to 15 per cent of the rural population fall under the category of real hunger.  they are invariably the landless families with women suffering more than extreme deprivation.  In his seven-point action plan: "Agenda 2007:  A hunger-free India", Dr. Swaminathan focused on identification of the real hungry and strategies for livelihood security for all, with thrust on poor women.

Under the circumstances, there is enough justification for more intensive WFP involvement that will be of lasting advantage to the poor in India trapped in the insidious cycle of hunger and poverty.

Explaining the women's role in ending hunger and poverty, Mr. Pedro Medrano said: "Women and mothers are foundations of a civil society.  Yet, the words 'poverty' and 'women' have become synonymous in nearly every quarter of the globe.  If hunger had a face, it would be the face of women as seven out of ten of the world's hard core poor are women and young children, and some 550 million live below the poverty line".

WFP issued a policy document on food aid strategies for women in 1987 and sectored guidelines for women in development and emergencies in 1989.  The WFP mission statement of 1995 reconfirmed women's role as the key to change.  The Fourth World Conference on Women (Beijing) brought about a new international commitment to the goals of gender equality, development of peace for all women and moved the global agenda for the advancement of women into the twenty-first century.  As a follow-up of the Beijing Conference (1995), the United Nations General Assembly will be holding a special session from June 5-9, 2000 under the theme of "Women 2000: Gender Equality, Development and Peace for the Twenty-First Century".

 

 

 

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