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UN says Pakistan has food 'emergency', but donors look elsewhere

Devil Soul

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UN says Pakistan has food 'emergency', but donors look elsewhere
By Reuters Published: June 23, 2013
PESHAWAR: Hunger in Pakistan is at emergency levels after years of conflict and floods, but funding has dwindled as new crises such as Syria grab donors’ attention, the United Nations food aid chief said on Sunday.
Fighting in tribal areas bordering Afghanistan compounded problems caused by three consecutive years of floods that destroyed crops and forced millions of people to temporarily abandon their homes.
Although most have now returned, about half of Pakistan’s population still does not have secure access to enough food, up from a little over a third a decade ago, the UN World Food Programme (WFP) said. Fifteen percent of children are severely malnourished, and some 40 percent suffer from stunted growth.
“This is an emergency situation, both from the food security side as well as from the malnutrition side,” WFP chief Ertharin Cousin told Reuters. “We need to raise the alarm.”
At a center for treating acute malnutrition in Swat Valley, visited by Cousin on Sunday, a young mother called Zainab clutched her underweight 2-month-old baby and waited for a high-nutrition food ration.
“When the area was evacuated, we left our cattle and our homes, when we came back our cattle were dead and our homes were destroyed,” said Zainab, who wore a black burqa.
There is growing concern that international donors will lose interest in the unstable border areas after the withdrawal next year of US-led foreign forces from Afghanistan.
Already, Cousin said, the rising cost of the refugee crisis in Syria meant it was harder to attract funds to Pakistan.
WFP’s Syria-related operations currently cost $19 million a month, and are forecast to rise as high as $42 million a month by the end of the year, putting a strain on Western donors.
North Korea is even worse hit by funding shortages, Cousin said, partly due to a drop in donations noticed at the beginning of this year, when Pyongyang threatened to launch a nuclear attack on the United States.
“We are significantly under-funded in DPRK going into this lean season, and we are very concerned about what that means,” said Cousin, who called off a visit to North Korea during the tensions in March. She said she still planned to visit.
 
Its true sadly but pakistan govt is introducing many reforms to improve agriculture sector such as solar powered tube wells, huge grants and subsidies for farmers, improvement of rural roads infrastructure etc. And the good news is that govt has initiated many small dam projects that will really improve our agriculture sector. In two years, things would definitely be better than what we have now.
 
No more handouts, no more bailout, no more international aid.

I just saw a report that a third of Pakistan's fruit crop rots away because of mismanagement and lack of equipment, It's time for the government to do something about this.


With problems like these, who needs enemies with nukes?
 
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No more handouts, no more bailout, no more international aid.

I just saw a report that a third of Pakistan's fruit crop rots away because of mismanagement and lack of equipment, It's time for the government to do something about this.

With problems like these, who needs enemies with nukes?


Maybe it is time that we look beyond government solutions --- The solutions we seek are in business, Sawaab and Kabaab together, profits from larger number of sales, lower prices and abundant food, .
 
Syria, couple of donor fatigue. We should stop waiting for handouts and start talking to Germany and Spain on GM Crops.

I understand that we have talent in Pakistan and we should focus on our own solutions, our crops, our patents, our profits
 
Syria, couple of donor fatigue. We should stop waiting for handouts and start talking to Germany and Spain on GM Crops.

@RescueRanger: Treat GM crops with caution. They are not any magic wand. The issue to be really addressed is 'Water Management'. With a great deal of Pakistan approaching semi-arid conditions; there is much more critical need to attempt drip-irrigation techniques rather than conventional flood irrigation techniques. Non-Traditional crops also need to be looked at as nutrition sources.
 
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Maybe it is time that we look beyond government solutions --- The solutions we seek are in business, Sawaab and Kabaab together, profits from larger number of sales, lower prices and abundant food, .

I have to agree partially, while it is true that the private sector would do tremendous good for Pakistan's agriculture and economy, there must be government laws and regulations in place to standardize quality control and make sure rampant capitalism doesn't get out of hand. Letting big-business police itself is only going to hurt Pakistan in the long run.

I trust businesses to make profit and support the local economy, I don't trust them to keep their greedy hands in check.
 
Syria, couple of donor fatigue. We should stop waiting for handouts and start talking to Germany and Spain on GM Crops.

If Pakistani's have some sense, they would learn from the failure of others - and particularly India.

GM seeds from firms like Monsanto have harmed Indian farmers.

What instead Pakistan should do is set up some of its own research labs to create its own GM seeds as per the local environment and get these distributed to the farmers.

As said earlier, the one country whose help Pakistan should seek is Israel. They are second to none in Agricultural productivity with least use of water. Israel is helping Indian firms in this a lot - from drip irrigation to other techniques.
 
U.N. says Pakistan has food "emergency", but donors look elsewhere

(Reuters) - Hunger in Pakistan is at emergency levels after years of conflict and floods, but funding has dwindled as new crises such as Syria grab donors' attention, the United Nations food aid chief said on Sunday.

Fighting in tribal areas bordering Afghanistan compounded problems caused by three consecutive years of floods that destroyed crops and forced millions of people to temporarily abandon their homes.

Although most have now returned, about half of Pakistan's population still does not have secure access to enough food, up from a little over a third a decade ago, the U.N. World Food Programme (WFP) said. Fifteen percent of children are severely malnourished, and some 40 percent suffer from stunted growth.

"This is an emergency situation, both from the food security side as well as from the malnutrition side," WFP chief Ertharin Cousin told Reuters. "We need to raise the alarm."

At a center for treating acute malnutrition in Pakistan's Swat Valley, visited by Cousin on Sunday, a young mother called Zainab clutched her underweight 2-month-old baby and waited for a high-nutrition food ration.


"When the area was evacuated, we left our cattle and our homes, when we came back our cattle were dead and our homes were destroyed," said Zainab, who wore a black burqa.

There is growing concern that international donors will lose interest in the unstable border areas after the withdrawal next year of U.S.-led foreign forces from Afghanistan.

Already, Cousin said, the rising cost of the refugee crisis in Syria meant it was harder to attract funds to Pakistan.

WFP's Syria-related operations currently cost $26 million a week, and are forecast to rise as high as $42 million a week by the end of the year, putting a strain on Western donors.

North Korea is even worse hit by funding shortages, Cousin said, partly due to a drop in donations noticed at the beginning of this year, when Pyongyang threatened to launch a nuclear attack on the United States.

"We are significantly under-funded in DPRK going into this lean season, and we are very concerned about what that means," said Cousin, who called off a visit to North Korea during the tensions in March. She said she still planned to visit.

(This story corrects the cost of Syrian operation in the ninth paragraph after WFP clarification)

(Reporting By Frank Jack Daniel; Editing by Robin Pomeroy)

U.N. says Pakistan has food emergency, but donors look elsewhere | Reuters
 
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