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Get Ready For Lots of These Headlines: Ethiopian children face starvation

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  • Get Ready For Lots of These Headlines: Ethiopian children face starvation

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/7449523.stm


    ...

    If there is no emergency food aid, tens of thousands of children will die. The under-fives are the most vulnerable. A few have died already. Their immune systems are so undermined that a small setback can be fatal.

    About an hour by car is the larger town of Boddetti. The market bustled. There was food here. Small piles of maize, barley, teff, lentils and beans.

    The prices had doubled in just five months. The traders struggled to make a sale. The people could not afford the price.

    At the grain market in Addis Ababa, the capital, some said the price of teff, their most important grain, had trebled.

    "The grain has never been so expensive," said Idris Mohammed, one of the traders. "It has never reached this level before."

    And that is Ethiopia's problem. As many as 4.5 million people are judged to need critical, emergency assistance. Not only are food prices soaring but there is not enough food in the country.

    ...

  • #2
    Re: Get Ready For Lots of These Headlines: Ethiopian children face starvation

    .
    Last edited by Nervous Drake; January 19, 2015, 01:34 PM.

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    • #3
      Re: Get Ready For Lots of These Headlines: Ethiopian children face starvation

      interesting, false banana, we might end up all eating this if global warming goes unchecked!

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      • #4
        Re: Get Ready For Lots of These Headlines: Ethiopian children face starvation

        More fallout from the accelerated debasement of the US $?

        Free Trade in Food Is `On the Ropes' Amid Shortages, Price Rise

        By Alison Fitzgerald and Mark Drajem
        June 19 (Bloomberg) -- Free-trade policies long advanced by World Bank President Robert Zoellick and U.S. President George W. Bush are losing favor as countries in Africa, Asia and Latin America find they can't buy enough food to feed their people.

        Global food prices have spiked 60 percent since the beginning of 2007, sparking riots in more than 30 countries that depend on imported food, including Cameroon and Egypt. The surge in prices threatens to push the number of malnourished people in the world from 860 million to almost 1 billion, according to the World Food Programme in Rome.

        Leaders of developing nations including the Philippines, Gambia and El Salvador now say the only way to nourish their people is to grow more food themselves rather than rely on cheap imports. The backlash may sink global trade talks, reduce the almost $1 trillion in annual food trade and lead to the return of high agricultural tariffs and subsidies around the world.

        ``Trade as the route to food security, that idea is on the ropes,'' said Arvind Subramanian, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington. ``If the guy who is selling it doesn't want to sell it overseas, then the guy at the other end is terribly exposed.''

        In dozens of interviews and speeches at the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization's Rome conference on the food crisis this month, officials from developing countries, farmers and leaders of non-governmental organizations said food self- sufficiency is the new goal for many poor nations.

        Grain exporters such as Argentina and Vietnam have restricted shipments, driving global prices higher and leaving nations that depend on imports searching for adequate supplies.

        Worldwide Search
        ``The idea of trade liberalization was that you could count on global markets, but they're not proving reliable,'' said David Orden, a fellow at the International Food Policy Research Institute in Washington.

        The Philippines has embarked on a worldwide search for additional food supplies to build stockpiles and ensure it can feed its people amid record prices. The surging costs of rice, other grains and fuels have stoked inflation and triggered concern of civil unrest, according to the International Monetary Fund. Philippines President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo said her country will try to become self-sufficient in food by 2010.

        ``For a long time, it made sense to buy food from the international market,'' said Arthur Yap, the Philippines Agriculture Minister, in an interview June 4 in Rome. ``The situation has changed.''

        The rift between developing countries and wealthy nations on food trade was apparent at the Rome conference. The U.S., the European Union and the World Bank all pushed for a new global trade agreement to cut subsidies and import duties in countries such as India and South Africa.

        Latest Talks
        The latest round of World Trade Organization negotiations was launched in 2001 in Doha, Qatar. The goal was to cut subsidies in rich nations and tariffs in poor nations, allowing the most efficient producers -- be they in Iowa or Cordoba, Argentina -- to sell to the world. Supporters say the economic rationale still holds.

        ``The reason why getting a Doha Round done is important is it'll end up reducing the cost of food, importing food,'' Bush said at the White House on May 1.

        The U.S. and Europe continue to subsidize production of grains and other commodities, enabling their farmers to undercut the prices of competitors in developing countries.

        Zoellick, Bush's former top trade adviser, said this month in Rome that one key to long-term food security is ``closing the Doha WTO deal, phasing out huge distortions from subsidies and tariffs.''

        Export Limits
        Most alarming to policy makers in food-importing nations are the export constraints imposed in Indonesia, Argentina, India and others. Thailand, the world's largest rice exporter, said in February that it would restrict shipments abroad to ensure stable prices at home. The country later reversed the decision.

        ``There is no security if your food basket is coming from another country,'' said Bakary Trawally, permanent secretary of Gambia's Department of State for Agriculture, in an interview in Rome. ``If they close it off, like Thailand did, you would be in trouble.''

        Trawally and officials from other developing countries say they will use more subsidies to boost domestic production.

        ``A few years ago it was thought it was better to buy food in other countries, but that whole policy failed,'' said Raul Robles, Agriculture Minister of Guatemala, in an interview. Now Guatemala has reversed course and is supporting farmers ``with land, seeds and technical help,'' he said.

        Defending Free Trade
        The trend has disheartened free-traders such as Orden and U.S. Agriculture Secretary Ed Schafer.

        ``We need to open up markets so you can have the free flow of food where you need it,'' Schafer said in an interview last week.
        The current crisis has shown the limits of free trade to provide food, some analysts say.

        ``Agriculture markets are notoriously volatile, and all countries really do have to make sure that they have at a minimum systems that don't let their people go hungry,'' said Sandra Polaski, a former Clinton administration trade official and fellow at the Carnegie Endowment in Washington.


        To contact the reporter on this story: Alison Fitzgerald in Washington at Afitzgerald2@bloomberg.net; Mark Drajem in Washington at mdrajem@bloomberg.net
        Last Updated: June 19, 2008 00:01 EDT
        http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?p...FQE&refer=home

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        • #5
          Re: Get Ready For Lots of These Headlines: Ethiopian children face starvation

          God, I hope Ethiopia doesn't provoke another war with Eritrea, given the state of their people... .

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          • #6
            Re: Get Ready For Lots of These Headlines: Ethiopian children face starvation

            Originally posted by phirang View Post
            God, I hope Ethiopia doesn't provoke another war with Eritrea, given the state of their people... .
            Wars (direct or by proxy) are a good distraction for governments in a precarious position at home. Until they become unaffordable and the unintended consequences threaten to destabilize even more.

            Witness Egypt's increasingly aggressive efforts to broker a cease-fire and more negotiations over Gaza. After years of using Gaza to counterbalance [internally and in the Arab world] their own peace agreement with Israel, they can no longer afford the internally destabilizing consequences of Hamas across their border.

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            • #7
              Re: Get Ready For Lots of These Headlines: Ethiopian children face starvation

              Originally posted by GRG55 View Post
              Wars (direct or by proxy) are a good distraction for governments in a precarious position at home. Until they become unaffordable and the unintended consequences threaten to destabilize even more.

              Witness Egypt's increasingly aggressive efforts to broker a cease-fire and more negotiations over Gaza. After years of using Gaza to counterbalance [internally and in the Arab world] their own peace agreement with Israel, they can no longer afford the internally destabilizing consequences of Hamas across their border.
              Not to condone the PFDJ (the junta in Eritrea), but the Eritrean issue is annoying because the border has been settled, but the Ethiopians refuse to return to their side of the newly deliniated border.

              Someone referred to as, "two bald men fighting over a comb".

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