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Archive for April 3rd, 2010

GLOBAL: EU raises the bar on food assistance

Posted by African Press International on April 3, 2010


Photo: IRIN
More attention is now being paid to the quality of food assistance available

JOHANNESBURG,  – Handing out cash or vouchers for food, or buying food aid in or near the country in need of emergency food assistance, has become official policy, the European Union (EU) announced on 31 March, breaking the link between donors supporting their own farmers and foreign food aid.

“By this step it has institutionalized the use of response tools such as cash transfers and vouchers,” said Chris Leather, Food and Agriculture Policy Adviser to Oxfam International.

The statement also called on EU members to adopt similar national policies. “That is where the challenge could lie – it would be interesting to see how all the members respond,” said Leather.

The announcement was part of two new policy frameworks adopted by the European Commission (EC) to help developing countries address food security in emergency and long-term situations.

A new humanitarian assistance framework contains the policy on response tools to enhance food security, and also spells out EU efforts to tackle acute food insecurity and malnutrition in crises.

The development agenda

The framework on food security takes a longer view and spells out the need to support agriculture in poor countries to help them reach the UN Millennium Development Goal (MDG) of halving hunger and poverty by 2015, one of eight such goals.

In 2010 over a billion people in the world are food insecure, said an EU press release providing the background to the new policy documents, and many poor countries seem unlikely to reach the MDG.

''Making real progress towards sustainable reduction of hunger in countries in protracted crisis is the big challenge for the coming several years''

“EU action needs to give priority to those food-insecure countries most off-track in reaching MDG1 [to halve hunger and poverty], in particular in Africa, but also South Asia and elsewhere (e.g. Bangladesh, Cambodia, Haiti, Nepal, Timor Leste),” said the framework on food security.

Leading food aid expert Daniel Maxwell, an associate professor at the Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy at Tufts University in the US, commented that “it would be good if other donors would take similar steps”.

“While there is always some gray area that is not so clearly defined as either ‘humanitarian’ or ‘developmental’, it is still good to see that the EC’s commitment to humanitarian food security emergencies is still governed by humanitarian principles, particularly at a time when other donors seem increasingly willing to subordinate humanitarian assistance to political or security objectives.”

Key messages

The new EU policy aims to strengthen the four pillars of food security in developmental as well as emergency settings, said a press release: (i) increasing availability of food, (ii) improving access to food, (iii) improving quality and ensuring people eat nutritious food, (iv) boosting the effectiveness of crisis prevention and management.

It called for a special focus on small-scale farmers and women, which should be commended, Leather said. It would also want to help the African Union accelerate the implementation of the African Land Policy Guidelines, completed in 2009, to secure people’s rights to land.

“[What] the EU framework does not address are the concerns around the purchase of land [in Africa] by foreigners,” said Leather. A recent report by ActionAid, a development agency, claimed that EU companies have acquired, or are negotiating for, at least five million hectares of land in developing countries.

In another significant move the EU called for support in reforming the Committee on World Food Security (CFS) “to become the pivotal global institution on food security”.

The CFS is a technical committee of the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), and serves as a forum in the UN system for the review and follow-up of policies on world food security, food production, nutrition, and physical and economic access to food.

The challenge

All this will need resources, “but we don’t know how – the documents lack that detail,” said Leather. “That is where the challenge will lie – the policies will come before the finance committee [of the EC] in May.”

Maxwell raised another issue: “Increasingly, the concern of food security agencies and activists is the growing list of countries in protracted crisis, … which are also not attracting development funding for the MDG goals because the likelihood of success, or even progress, remains in doubt,” he noted.

“Making real progress towards sustainable reduction of hunger in countries in protracted crisis is the big challenge for the coming several years.”

jk/he source.irinnews

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GLOBAL: Hunt for sleeping sickness drug continues

Posted by African Press International on April 3, 2010


Photo: University of Dundee
The parasite trypanosome that causes sleeping sickness in its normal state (top) and then treated with the drug and about to ‘explode’

DAKAR, 1 April 2010 (IRIN) – Scientists from the UK and Canada have identified drug compounds to cure a fatal parasitic disease found in sub-Saharan Africa commonly known as sleeping sickness.

Also known as human African trypanosomiasis (HAT), the disease disrupts the sleep cycle when parasites infect the brain.

Some 30 years ago the drug Eflornithine was introduced for treatment of the disease, which is spread through tsetse flies.

But patients in rural areas most at risk can rarely afford the drug, which is ineffective against more advanced forms of the disease, according to World Health Organization’s (WHO) Department of Control of Neglected Tropical Diseases. “Despite some efforts and some promising candidates, no new drug has been added for HAT treatment,” WHO medical officer, Jose Ramon Franco, told IRIN.

The hard part has been to design a drug that kills the parasite without harming the brain, Franco told IRIN. An arsenic-based drug to attack parasites once they have infected the brain kills one in 20 patients.

Paul Wyatt, director of the drug discovery for tropical diseases programme at the Scotland-based University of Dundee, said scientists have discovered a new way to kill the parasite without harm to the patient.

“The first is identifying an Achilles heel of the parasite, such as an enzyme which is essential for the survival of the parasites, known as a drug target. The second is to confirm that molecules can disrupt these targets and so kill the parasite.” He said the university is now developing drugs that may be ready for testing on humans within 18 months.

WHO’s Franco told IRIN the ideal drug for HAT should be oral, low-toxicity, simple to use, easy to store, effective in both early and advanced stages and in forms of the disease found in West and Central Africa as well as East and southern Africa. And, “most important of all, be affordable,” he said.

Even if the drug makes it through trials there is still the issue of affordability, said Alan Fairlamb with the University of Dundee’s drug unit. “There is little economic incentive for big pharmaceutical companies to engage in diseases from sub-Saharan Africa. We’ve seen that these companies are now looking to Asia and Latin America as emerging markets, but one doesn’t exist in Africa yet.”

Drug manufacturers have started to produce vaccines for poor countries at reduced prices in exchange for donors guaranteeing orders over the long-term in “advance market commitments”.

WHO estimates that tens of thousands of people in sub-Saharan Africa are infected with HAT annually. But as diagnosis requires examining brain fluids through a lower-back puncture, patients with no access to health facilities may die without ever being diagnosed.

pt/npsource.irinnews

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IRAQ: State food aid package slashed

Posted by African Press International on April 3, 2010


Photo: Sabah Arar/UNICEF
More than half Iraq’s 29 million citizens receive government food aid (file photo)

BAGHDAD,  – The Iraqi government has decided to cut by half the number of items in state food aid parcels – something that could affect roughly half the population, according to the Trade Ministry.

In future, parcels would contain only flour, rice, sugar, cooking oil and milk.

“The food rationing system has become a burden on the budget,” Deputy Trade Minister Waleed al-Hilo told IRIN. About US$3 million has been allocated to the Trade Ministry for state food aid – half the sum requested, he said.

“These allocations are not enough to keep the system running until the end of the year because of an increase in prices… So we decided to focus our attention on the most important items,” he said, adding that they would continue to distribute some of the soon-to-be omitted items for several months while stocks lasted.

The move comes just a few weeks after a decision to exclude from state food aid distribution lists those considered to be better off.

Iraq’s food rationing system, known as the Public Distribution System (PDS), was set up in 1995 as part of the UN’s oil-for-food programme following Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait in 1990, but it has been crumbling since 2003 due to poor management, insecurity and corruption, a senior official said.

Monthly PDS parcels have hitherto been supposed to contain rice (3kg per person); sugar (2kg per person); cooking oil (1.25kg or one litre per person); flour (9kg per person); milk for adults (250g per person); tea (200g per person); beans (250g per person); children’s milk (1.8kg per child); soap (250g per person); detergents (500g per person); and tomato paste (500g per person).

Many people are shocked by the latest move.

“As a construction worker, I don’t have a steady daily or monthly income. I’m highly dependent on government aid for food and non-food items,” said Kahalf Hamid Dawood, 52, from Sadr City in east Baghdad.

He explained that by selling some of the food items he did not need, he was able to earn a little extra money. “The government must compensate poor people with money so that they can buy what they need. The cut will place another burden on us,” he said.

sm/ed/cb source.irinnews

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