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Princess Haya Al Hussein

Princess Haya Al Hussein

Posted: October 15, 2010 08:51 AM

Putting Food First


Let them eat cake.

Not since the famously callous phrase attributed to Marie Antoinette spread through revolutionary France has the world's political establishment been so far out of touch with the reality of hunger.

We simply don't get it. We rarely even talk about it. That may sound strange coming from a Jordanian princess, but as a UN Messenger of Peace I have made it my business to understand why 925 million of us still do not have enough to eat and to get to know some of those who don't. I've found the more you know about hunger, the more complicated it gets.

A few weeks ago the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) proudly announced the great news that the number of malnourished people in the world had dropped below 1 billion -- the first annual decline in 15 years. Shortly thereafter, these figures supported arguments at a UN Summit in New York that we were, in fact, making progress towards the Millennium Development Goals to cut poverty and disease.

Well in many ways we are, but there is little real headway on hunger. Basically, we are patting ourselves on the back this year because, for a change, the situation did not get any worse.

Politicians live to make promises. As a clever old Russian once put it: "We politicians cannot help ourselves. We promise to build bridges, even where there are no rivers." The Millennium Development Goals are perhaps history's greatest promises -- though this time there really is a river. When we adopted the MDGs in 2000 there were 830 million hungry.

Even after the recent drop, a decade later we are at 925 million. How is that progress?

We seem to have been deluding ourselves about hunger for decades. When I was a young girl, Henry Kissinger visited my father King Hussein in Amman on his way to Rome. The world was in the midst of a food crisis then and the US had just curtailed its soybean exports. Kissinger later made the historic pledge that within a decade no child would go to bed hungry.

You have to applaud him for promising big -- even the MDGs do not go that far. They only aim to cut the suffering roughly by half. Sadly, as the mid 1970s food crisis faded, the major donors and the development banks turned their attention elsewhere and slashed relative funding for agriculture by more than 70 percent. Farming has never been all that fashionable among economists or developing country politicians. Airports, massive dams, and factories have greater cache.

What's worse is that many experts denied the problem for so long, even as the numbers rose. General economic growth and employment generation were supposed to end hunger -- no need to bother about the farmers. According to FAO and WFP, the number of hungry actually started to climb back in the mid 1990s at a pace of more than 4 million people a year. The food crisis of 2007-8 pushed the ranks of the hungry past the 1 billion mark.

Who are the "hungry"? Well, most live a "hand to mouth" existence in the countryside outside the market economies that have sprung up globally over the last few decades. If you had to put a face on hunger, it would be young and female with a dark complexion -- and that goes a long way toward explaining why much of the world does not seem to care and why aid does not easily reach them.

Your chances of being malnourished go up sharply if you are born Black, Asian or female. A rapidly rising number of the malnourished are AIDS or TB victims and their families. What you won't see as often among the hungry are faces that are white or male. It seems that hunger is both racist and sexist.

Perhaps the worst aspect of the problem is that it is becoming invisible and implausible in a world where the number of overweight people -- 1.6 billion -- now far exceeds the number of hungry.

If an eight-year-old girl in Zambia is sickly and anemic, what difference does that make in our wifi world? How does that affect you? The occasional humanitarian appeal in Time, The Economist or a television ad does not make her real.

She is not our child. She does not live where we live.

Well, in fact, she is our child and we all have a stake in her development. Anemia impairs the mental development of 40-60 percent of children in developing countries and is the most prevalent form of malnutrition, affecting roughly 2 billion people.

Eradicating iron deficiency would, according to the World Health Organization, improve national productivity levels by as much as 20 percent. Imagine all that buying power. Healthy children make for healthy economies and markets from which we all eventually benefit. Those who are indifferent to the suffering, should at least recognize the economic value in ending it.

What can we do to turn this situation around? Impatient with the lack of progress on hunger in Africa by the traditional aid agencies and development banks, private donors led by the Gates Foundation have moved into the hunger arena and poured funds into Kofi Annan's Alliance for a Green Revolution.

With a budget of over $400 million, AGRA is the biggest operational anti-hunger initiative in Africa, and it is homegrown. It's first priority is introducing new high-yield seeds because that was the key to the success of the first Green Revolution which pulled south Asia back from the brink of mass starvation. Other new projects for small farmers, mostly women, will help renew soil fertility, build markets and introduce small scale irrigation.

To its credit, the Obama Administration has expanded its agricultural development budget to $1 billion, and the World Bank, recognizing past errors, has wisely doubled its own loan portfolio in agriculture. Recently, Arab nations have begun debating a massive $65 billion plan to boost food production in light of critical water shortages and huge food imports.

Some African Governments have begun adopting new approaches. A few years back I visited Malawi where the food situation was, to put it mildly, very precarious, but later the country managed to produce significant surpluses after adopting a fertilizer subsidy scheme. This is a sign that Africans can profit from trying new strategies.

Finally, MSF and UNICEF have spearheaded efforts to broaden the use of ready-to-use therapeutic foods to combat the destructive effects of malnutrition on children under 2. Early malnutrition leads to stunting and mental damage that cannot be completely overcome even if a child's food intake improves later in life.

What is missing is that, except for the occasional rhetorical flourish, most politicians remain out of touch, uncomprehending of life for those living at the brink of starvation. They have failed to put food first in global economic development and aid funding. Yes, promises are made, but often they are not kept. In 2008, the G8 pledged $20 billion in new funds for agriculture. Less than $500 million has actually materialized. It is time politicians made more than promises.

 
 
 
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12:29 AM on 10/23/2010
I think it is very possible to feed the worlds population. The problem really just boils down to money, that is usually what all problems boil down to. Either no money to buy food, or no money to buy what it takes to grow food, or no money to develop infrastructure to distribute food. World hunger doesn't have jack squat to do with first world farm subsidies or eating meat.

There is too much talk from celebrities about world hunger, and not enough doing.
11:08 AM on 10/18/2010
If you were a princess, what would you do?
Truly one of the most beautiful and gracious women of the world.
This is a condition that can not be solved by men. We must pray with the Lord God, Christ, Adonai, Allah, however you know him. As much as we try to share with those we can reach, there are trillions we can not. We implore you O Father God to feed your starving children.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
live by the golden rule
11:46 AM on 10/17/2010
Inspired by a meeting with Senator McGovern, President Clinton started a school lunch program-- not as large as needed, but still it made a significant difference-- children could go to school instead of being lured into local militias by the promise of food. The program was immediately eliminated by the Bush administration. As Congressman McGovern (no relation) put it: what is crueler than leaving a child without food? Giving a child food and then taking it away.
Bush and the Republicans had money to invade Iraq, but not enough money to continue an effective anti-hunger program--- they actually took food away from children who were being fed. They are murderers.
05:09 AM on 10/17/2010
Everyone likes to comment...without taking the tome to check on facts. Dubai is wealthy, but small. Yet she and her husband donated $10 billion to start an education fund, one of the largest in the world, and every year Dubai businesses come up with close to $1 billion on top of that. If we all donated as much of our income, there would be no hunger anywhere. The issue is not that she is a princess -- but what she does with that fact.
10:21 PM on 10/16/2010
"Most politicians remain out of touch" said the Princess.
05:13 PM on 10/16/2010
She is jet-setting around the world having high-powered meetings with people she would call "geniuses" just for the possibility some starving man in Africa gets a stale crust of bread.

Meanwhile God only knows what exploitation has gone on so the princess can be a princess, and she is shames us?
05:37 PM on 10/16/2010
Not to mention that before we even get one of those crusts of bread we have to bend down say a thousand thank yous and kiss her feet. And she is the princess living in the palace?

She probably got high marks in school but she can't be too bright. I'm sure she has people telling her she is though.
03:39 PM on 10/16/2010
These princesses, queens, celebrities and do-gooders are constantly hitting on all the rest of us, imploring us to help "feed the children." Fine & dandy, BUT they NEVER mention anything about sustainability in their relentless pleadings. Hey, how bad does it have to get before enough is enough (people, that is)? One per square yard? Shoulder to shoulder? Why don't those idiots ever think about THAT??? Without a comprehensive plan, which be necessity includes some kind of population control, such pleadings aren't just senseless, they're destructive! Do YOU want clean air, clean and abundant water, and wilderness to visit from time to time? That is possible ONLY if we reign in our propensity to breed! I wish that people would GET A CLUE!!!
12:57 PM on 10/16/2010
There are two groups I am aware of that are dealing with this issue at a grassroots level. First is Development in Gardening (http://www.developmentingardening.org/DIG/HOME.html) who plants gardens at AIDS clinics and orphanages where improved nutrition is critical for survial. The second is Heifer International (http://www.heifer.org) a group who supply livestock and training to people in need, who then pass along the gift by sharing offing animals to others in the community.

These are the charities I contribute to.
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12:46 PM on 10/16/2010
eat to live......don't live to eat.......
12:30 PM on 10/16/2010
Petty? Yes, just like the rich who confuse donating their "time" with donating money. The point is that the reason people aren't eating is there are 2% of the world's population hoarding the world's money. These people answer to no governments and basically pay no taxes. These people, including this woman can solve this problem with a snap of their fingers. Why don't they?
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Libertarian09
Anti War Socialist with a taste for freedom
06:21 PM on 10/16/2010
Human nature.
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Judith K Bogdanove
12:03 PM on 10/16/2010
To the person who demanded that we go vegan -- the problem with meat eating is not the meat itself. It is the way the livestock are raised. If we meat eaters all demanded that beef and poultry be raised in a self-sustaining manner (grass-fed and scratching) the amount of meat eaten would be lowered naturally, our soils made more productive, and the quality of food would rise.
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Judith K Bogdanove
11:48 AM on 10/16/2010
One of the reasons real problems like hunger can't be solved is because of constant warring among nations. How much of the world's gross national product is wasted because people can't agree on whose mythological deity is real? If the princess exhorted her fellow Arab countries to follow Jordan's example by recognizing Israel's right to exist -- for instance -- in one fell political swoop there could be a major paradigm shift toward solving the hunger problem for all the world's children.
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Libertarian09
Anti War Socialist with a taste for freedom
06:25 PM on 10/16/2010
The single biggest problem in solving world hunger is the subsidies of agriculture in the Western world and has zero to do with recognizing Israel's proclaimed right to exist.
08:21 PM on 10/16/2010
Really...subsidies are the cause of hunger. I believe libertarians are the major cause of hunger in their polyannish belief that the rich will somehow sustain the world and that everyone with effort can become rich. If they don't... well they deserve it. And a higher being forget about it. Really!

Of course why mention Israel as that would really get in the way of the libertarian fascist agenda, Obviously, no libertarian has read the history of Rome or they would have realized that the Jewish homeland is Israel since the Romans expended blood and wealth to destroy it.
12:30 AM on 10/23/2010
World hunger and subsidies in the Western world have nothing to do with each other. Maybe you could explain why I am wrong?
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biggerjake
Religion poisons everything...
10:32 AM on 10/16/2010
The princess is a beautiful and charming woman with a heart of gold who has spent much of her life trying to help some of the most desperate, destitute and helpless people in the world. Her husband who is also quite philanthropic is like the coolest king ever…but..

Solving the world’s hunger problems is a complex and complicated issue. All too often, aid ends up in the hands of the people who have created the crisis in the first place. From The Crisis Caravan by Linda Polman:

“In Ethiopia in the 1980s, aid organizations helpfully provided the regime with money and supplies during a forced-migration program that costs tens of thousands of people their lives. In Goma in the 1990s humanitarian organizations helped the Rawandan genocidairs to regroup, enabling them to continue their extermination campaign against the Tutsis in Rewanda.”

In addition to tackling world hunger, we must also reform the way aid is given out by humanitarian organizations. Sometimes the best thing you can do is to do nothing.
12:38 PM on 10/16/2010
Well, what percent of her wealth has she or her husband committed to the cause of reducing hunger in the world. I doubt it is more than 1%. Listen, I don't know this woman, and have nothing against her, but I think, if she is serious, she should approach the people who can fix this. The wealthy.
03:47 AM on 10/16/2010
So right and so articulate. Why are we not focusing on this? Politics just get in the way.
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starmanx
beam me up, Scotty
02:06 AM on 10/16/2010
The real problem is getting the money to the people who are suffering and not some sociopathic politican who pockets most of it. Giving money to corrupt regimes is rather pointless. There should be a single UN agency that handles ALL the donations and who sees that the money is properly used. I will not donate under the present system and help support some tyrant.
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Libertarian09
Anti War Socialist with a taste for freedom
06:33 PM on 10/16/2010
Also giving money to charities so that they can pay Westerners big salaries to do the "charitable" work is pointless. I know someone who is currently in Haiti doing charitable work for a NGO and her salary from this non-profit corporation is $65,000/yr. Something tells me that this amount of money given to actual Haitians would do immeasurably more good than what she is able to do for them. Another issue with charitable organizations is that the place their efforts in sustaining people rather than addressing the actual reasons for their impoverishment. Starving people don't need us to ship them food in an ongoing basis, they need us to ship them the agricultural requirements to produce their own food, but just as in the medical community the focus is on treating illness rather than on eliminating the illness.