Monday, September 28, 2009

Desperation growing as poor neglected in Pakistan

(Excerpts:)
"As they say, poverty is not about loss of income, it is about loss of capability. We must strengthen our people, men women and children by national literacy schemes, good basic health coverage, skill development and livelihood schemes," said Shah (parliamentarian Nafisa Shah from Sindh province).

Jobs would give people the "capability to confront and overcome poverty."

PAKISTAN: 'Empty Stomachs' Could Spark More Riots, Experts Warn
By Zofeen Ebrahim

KARACHI, Sep 23 (IPS) - For a bag of flour, they risked life and limb.

Scores of women, many of them married and with children, gathered outside the office of Chaudhry Iftikhar, a local trader, in the old quarters of the port city's Khori Garden to get free rations of flour.

Then a stampede broke out as the people scampered to get their hands on the rations, killing 18 women and leaving more than 30 others injured, most of them between ages 30 and 50.

The Sep. 14 unfortunate incident took place while the Ramadan – an Islamic holy month during which people fast from dawn to dusk — was being observed.

During this monthlong religious observance, many philanthropists dole out charity, believing it helps them win favour from God. Pakistan is known to be one of the top ten countries with the highest level of individual charity. Iftikhar had been distributing free rations of flour for over a decade at the site of the stampede.

Facing a judicial inquiry into the incident, Iftikhar blamed the skyrocketing prices of essential commodities, including flour, which he said exacerbated poverty and spawned the Monday mayhem.

Baspareen was among those who perished in the stampede. Her family's sole breadwinner, her husband being ill, she left behind seven preschool-age children. Safia, the eldest of the brood, will now have to assume her mother's role of looking after her family.

"Hunger and poverty has a female face, definitely," said parliamentarian Nafisa Shah from Sindh province.

"Women bear the burnt (of hunger)… due to our defined gender roles. Women are responsible for cooking and feeding the children," explained Mustafa Talpur, regional advocacy and policy advisor in Asia for WaterAid, an international non-governmental organisation which provides water, sanitation and hygiene education to some of the world's poor.

Citing food security studies, Talpur said women "are responsible for food grains, cooking. . . and are the last to get food when everybody in the family has had their meal".

"The recent tragic death of women has only made the issue more visible. In rural areas there are many manifestations of hunger — like low birth-weight babies, under-five malnourishment," to name a few. Incidents similar to the Khori Garden stampede — albeit sporadic and on a smaller scale — had taken place in the past, where some people lost lives trying to get food.

In one of these horrific episodes, 12-year-old Ejaz Solangi died in a baton charge by police who were trying to pacify a frenzied mob scrambling for wheat in Thatta, Sindh province. Fifty-five-year-old Mohammad Rafaqat died in Gujranwala in Punjab province while waiting in queue to buy 10 kilograms of flour.

I.A. Rehman, director of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP), warned of more of these incidents "if centres for free distribution of food or for sale at subsidized rates are opened."

On the other hand, he said, if such centres are not opened, "we should be prepared for food riots, the first common stage for anarchy," he told IPS.

"There is a revolution brewing, for nothing is worse than an empty stomach," declared social worker Perween Saeed. Ten years ago, she opened a 'tandoor' restaurant (where one can buy two pieces of subsidised 'roti' – unleavened bread – and get a plate of curry or vegetables for free) for the daily wage earners in a poor locality of Karachi, which she has since expanded to three.

"There will be an increase in criminal activity, and if the state doesn't pay attention now, the results will be horrific," she warned.

Abdul Sattar Edhi, founder of Pakistan's best-known charity, Edhi Foundation, said "a bloody revolution is simmering." He added, "people will resort to killing to feed their children."

There have been reports of parents either selling or poisoning their due to poverty. Just recently, a man had gone to the press club in Quetta in the north-west of Balochistan province, announcing that he was selling off his daughter so he could a bag of flour for his family.

Edhi, who runs a 'langar'(soup kitchen) across Pakistan to feed approximately 250,000 people, has urged people not to sell or kill their children. "Send me your children. I will feed all of them," he said.

"The state needs to take cognizance of these facts. We have serious issues of poverty and hunger in a country which has long been a net grain exporter," said Ali Dayan Hasan, South Asia senior researcher of the Human Rights Watch, during a telephone interview from Lahore, capital of Punjab province.

"We always had poverty and hunger, but never starvation. In large parts of the country, most people got a meal," Hasan said, adding that what was changing now was that the "poor are getting poorer" and that the gap between rich and poor has widened.

Based on 2008 data from the Food and Agriculture Organisation, a specialised agency of the United Nations, undernourishment in Pakistan increased from 24 to 28 percent of the population, and the number of people deemed to be "food insecure" increased from 60 million to 77 million during the same period.

Pakistan's economic growth slowed to two percent during the fiscal year 2008-2009, down from an average annual 6.8 percent over the previous five years.

Consumer prices in this South Asia's second largest economy rose 10.7 percent from a year earlier after gaining 11.2 percent in July, according to the Federal Bureau of Statistics.

"It's a huge failing of successive governments, as we see the gaps widening," said Zohra Yusuf of HRCP.

"That this should happen in a country proud of its nuclear capability and one of the largest standing armies in the world is very instructive," said senior journalist and political analyst Ghazi Salahuddin.

He said those in the government needed to improve their image. "Pakistan must have created a record of (the number of) days its president has been abroad in a year — perhaps more than one hundred days!"

Shah cited "economic meltdown, inflation, the war against militancy" as reasons for the worsening poverty in her country. She was quick to point out, however, that "underspending on social sectors, historically, has made our people vulnerable. Hence (the incidence of) ill health, hunger, illiteracy."

"Non-developmental expenditure remains unchecked while no attempt is made at economic reforms – land or industrial or labour," said Yusuf.

Edhi refused to pin the blame squarely on the government for the extent of poverty now gripping the nation. Tax evaders are responsible for the empty national coffers, he said.

"I also blame all of us who have plenty of money to drink endless cups of tea, smoke cigarettes, chew 'paan' (betel leaf) and using cell phones. We are a nation of spendthrifts. No wonder our leaders are begging all the time."

"I don't think there is a dearth of wheat or rice. Even Pakistan is exporting rice," said Mustafa Talpur, regional advocacy and policy advisor in Asia for WaterAid. The actual issues are "distribution and affordability" of basic commodities for the poor, especially those in urban areas.

Noted economist Haris Gazdar said the "dignified way is to have a proper social protection system in place, which is what some people in governments are trying to do."

He explained: "There is a tradeoff between queues and markets. You ration through queues or through prices, your choice." He said the present scenario was a "media-generated hype," adding that the opposition party, Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz Group), "generated populism around giving free/cheap food to people without having any proper mechanisms in place."

He sid the real culprits of the Khori Garden incident "are foolish and self-promoting private charities, media, and public figures who are generating populism around need."

On Sep. 16, the government launched an income generation programme, Waseela-e-Haq, under which interest-free loans of 3,000 Pakistan rupees (36 U.S. dollars) would be given every month to 731 families, to be paid over a period of 12 to 15 years.

This programme is under the 34 billion-Pakistan rupee (412 million U.S. dollars) Benazir Income Support Programme (BISP) launched in October 2008.

"BISP is a very good poverty alleviation programme," conceded Shah, but it needs to be "supplemented with good and sensible spending on the social sectors."

"Priorities have to change if the state considers that people are important," said Hasan.

"As they say, poverty is not about loss of income, it is about loss of capability. We must strengthen our people, men women and children by national literacy schemes, good basic health coverage, skill development and livelihood schemes," said Shah.

Jobs would give people the "capability to confront and overcome poverty."

(END/2009)
 

Friday, September 25, 2009

Prioritizing sustainable food, nutritional security, regionally and globally

LATIN AMERICA: Food Crisis Must Be Regional Priority
By Humberto Márquez

CARACAS, Sep 21 (IPS) - There are 52 million hungry people in Latin America and the Caribbean, six million more than in 2008 - an aspect of the global economic crisis that must be a top priority focus of national policies and development aid, according to a meeting of experts from 27 countries held in the Venezuelan capital.

The region "presents a contradiction, because it has resources, land, water, energy and other elements necessary to sustain production that would be sufficient to cover needs, but by contrast it has areas suffering chronic food shortages," Mexican economist José Rivera, secretary general of the Latin American Economic System (SELA), told IPS during a break in a Sept. 17-18 meeting on the food crisis in the region held by the regional body.

What has been described as a financial debacle since 2008 "is actually a structural crisis affecting finance, employment, food supplies, the environment, energy shortages and climate change. But it is the food aspect that requires priority treatment, because it directly affects people's lives," Rivera said during the two-day gathering, which involved experts from the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) and the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC).

One out of 10 people in Latin America and the Caribbean go to bed hungry every night, while at a global level, one billion people do so – 100 million more than in 2008, according to the FAO.

The U.N. agency doubts that the goal of cutting the number of hungry people in the world to 420 million by 2015 - the goal set at the World Food Summit in 1996, when some 800 million people were hungry – will be met..

The issues of food security and hunger eradication must be dealt with "as national priorities, by incorporating them as central elements of state policies and of the cooperation and integration agendas with a regional scope," said the representatives of SELA's 27 member states taking part in the Meeting for Consultation and Coordination on Food Prices and Food Security in Latin America and the Caribbean.

"It is fundamental to commit all national bodies, including the private sector, government agencies, subregional integration schemes and specialised international organisations to the strategies to guarantee food and nutritional security," added the document containing the meeting's conclusions and recommendations.

"The challenge posed to developing countries by the goals of sustainable food and nutritional security entails increasing supply, raising productivity, incorporating vulnerable communities and favouring the appropriate operation of local agricultural markets, while giving priority to cooperatives and small and medium-sized agricultural producers," says the document.

"There are experiences that are worthy of greater attention, like the efforts of Bolivia and Ecuador to salvage native knowledge and plant varieties that are known by rural indigenous communities and are of high nutritional value and have not been commercialised," Diego Montenegro, a Bolivian representative of the Inter-American Institute for Cooperation on Agriculture (IICA), told IPS during the meeting in Caracas.

The meeting discussed the impact on food supplies and on agricultural sustainability of the global rise in food prices, which according to Montenegro increased by an average of 40 percent in the 2006-2008 period.

The conclusions of the meeting point out that "the recent expansion of the (region's) agricultural and livestock production and exports has been concentrated in a limited set of primary commodities with little added value. This has resulted in a high vulnerability to the fluctuations in the international prices of both exportable products (such as coffee and soybean) and import products (such as rice, corn, sugar, etc.) and in significant falls in the international exchange terms."

The price of cooking oils, for example, rose 153 percent on average from 2006 to 2008, while the price of cereals when went up 126 percent and dairy products 88 percent.

One commodity that particularly stood out was rice, the price of which climbed 140 percent in just five months in 2008 – from 376 dollars a ton in January to 900 dollars a ton in May – compared to beef, which went up just 28 percent between 2006 and September 2008, when the price peaked.

"Speculation has been one of the factors that has hit the food market hardest," said Rivera, who called for support for initiatives to limit financial speculation in international commodity markets.

The SELA meeting called for the exchange of information and the transfer of appropriate technology in the region, training in agriculture and livestock breeding, the generation of applied knowledge, and the use of new technologies in the agricultural sector, to benefit small and medium-sized producers in particular.

The participants also recommended the establishment of a special food security fund, to assist countries with agricultural production projects and food emergency programmes, and the creation of networks of regional research institutions and laboratories for seed improvement, genetic upgrading and the development of resistant varieties.

The delegates especially highlighted an initiative adopted in February 2009 by the member countries of ALBA (Bolivarian Alternative for the Peoples of the Americas), an alternative bloc made up of Antigua and Barbuda, Bolivia, Cuba, Dominica, Ecuador, Honduras, Nicaragua, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, and Venezuela.

In April, the ALBA food programme earmarked nine million dollars for an agricultural project in Haiti, the poorest country in the hemisphere, and a total of 13 million dollars for 10 projects in eight other countries in the Caribbean region.

SELA reported that the initiative focuses on needy sectors of the population like indigenous communities, peasant farmers and Afro-descendants.

The regional body also underscored an innovative scheme by Petrocaribe – under which Venezuela sells some 15 countries in the region fuel on preferential terms – involving the creation of a 50 million dollar development fund. As long as the price of oil is above 100 dollars a barrel, Petrocaribe will earmark 50 cents of a dollar for food security projects in the region for every barrel it sells.

Delegates at the meeting also warned of the need to keep the production of biofuels from triggering a conflict between the environment, agriculture and trade.

Montenegro said that "fortunately, many countries interested in agro-bio-energy have identified crops that have high energy value and do not compete with food production, while biofuel consumer countries like the United States have recognised that competing with food production is not right in a situation like today's."

Rivera, meanwhile, warned that the full impact of the global crisis in the region has not yet been felt, and that food insecurity could become even worse in the next few months – in spite of the fact that this region, home to less than 10 percent of the global population, has 15 percent of the planet's farmland and 33 percent of the world's water sources, grows 30 percent of all oilseed crops and produces 21 percent of the world's chicken and 26 percent of beef.

Indeed, as the SELA document points out, "Due to its agricultural potential and as a food producer, the region could contribute to significantly solving the lack of food at the global level." (END/2009)


Source: http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=48533


Outright slavery, people trafficking widespread in Australia

'Slavery active in Australia': Legal expert  

 

SYDNEY25 September 2009


Australia has become a destination country for people traffickers who are the modern-day version of slave traders, according to Pam Stewart, a senior law lecturer from the University of Technology, Sydney.

Ms Stewart is a member of the Anti-Slavery Project, which was established at the university in 2003. The project provides direct assistance to victims of enslavement and human trafficking as well as advocating legal and policy reform.

People trafficking is a human rights issue, said Ms Stewart, who was speaking at a reception held at the Bahá'í National Centre on 20 September to mark the International Day of Peace.

"This is about human rights abuses happening in Australia today," she said.

People trafficked to Australia are forced to work by their slave-owner/employer, often in the sex industry or as forced labourers, Ms Stewart said.

"They are commodified, dehumanised, imprisoned, and denied their own identity by having their documents taken away," she said.

Ms Stewart said that people traffickers rely on their victims' fear of authorities.

"They are frightened - frightened of being sent back, frightened of giving evidence, frightened for their welfare of their families at home," she said.

"People need to know what their rights are. In many cases, they don't even know they have rights," Ms Stewart said.

Lucrative

People trafficking is one of the world's most lucrative crimes, Ms Stewart said.

It is estimated that traffickers have reaped some $42.5 billion a year worldwide in the past decade, she said.

Although the exact scale of the problem in Australia is unknown, the Australian Federal Police has undertaken more than 270 investigations of trafficking related offences since 2004, leading to 34 people being charged and nine convictions.

"These cases are only the tip of the iceberg," Ms Stewart said.

Ms Stewart praised the Federal government for introducing laws that criminalise slavery, sexual servitude, trafficking and debt bondage.

She said that the Australian Federal Police has a taskforce to combat people trafficking.

A Commonwealth Victim Support Program for trafficked persons has provided support to 107 people, nearly all of them women, since 2004, she said.

Special visa arrangements have also been put in place for trafficking victims.

"We are achieving things but there's plenty more to do," Ms Stewart said.

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