Use our pull-down menus to find more stories
  


OR subscribers use AllAfrica's premium search engine


Click here to read or make comments on this topic »

Senegal: FAO Director-General Responds to Criticism By President


 

Email This Page

Print This Page

Comment on this article

Visit The Publisher's Site

Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (Rome)

DOCUMENT
15 May 2008
Posted to the web 15 May 2008

The FAO Director-General is currently working on all continents to deal with the global food crisis, together with Member States, development partners and other UN agencies. While duty-bound to defend an organization of 191 member countries that he was re-elected, unopposed, to lead in 2005, he has no intention of being distracted by a controversy motivated by Senegalese domestic politics with the Head of State to whom he owes respect and esteem.

However the issues raised need objective answers:

1. Regarding the "institutions which, in Niger, said there was a famine". Which are those institutions? Is FAO one of them? In an article in "Le Quotidien" on 27/11/2007 the journalist Paul Diene Faye wrote, not without humour: "Senegal may not yet have a famine, or at least the Director-General of FAO, the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization, doesn't want to say so. The reason, explains Mr Jacques Diouf, is that it is not FAO's role to say which parts of the world are affected by famine. Its mandate, he explains, is to publish a document entitled "The State of Food Insecurity in the World". FAO's Director-General stresses that this is not an "instant" document; it is prepared over a long period of time, and with all due precaution."

2. As to the statement that, "Feeding the poor is charity": Does FAO distribute food? What bilateral, regional and multilateral institutions do that job?

3. "Technical assistance to agriculture is assistance to men and women standing on their own two feet". Technical assistance is precisely what FAO does:

* with field training activities, including the Technical Cooperation Programme (TCP) and South-South cooperation (1,473 experts made available to developing countries);

* by strengthening veterinary services (against Foot and Mouth Disease, Rift Valley Fever, African Swine Fever, Contagious Bovine Pleuropneumonia, Avian Influenza, Newcastle disease, Peste des Petits Ruminants, Bluetongue disease, and plant health services (strengthening early-warning and response capacities against desert locusts and wheat stem rust);

* by using integrated biological control, halving pesticide quantities by 50 percent and obtaining a 15 percent increase in rice production;

* by disseminating hand and foot pumps, irrigation channels, small dams, metal storage silos;

* through projects aimed at increased production of rice, corn, cassava, vegetables, micro-gardens, poultry farming, small ruminants and the introduction and development of aquaculture;

* by re-establishing the productive potential of farmers, herders and fishers following natural disasters such as floods, droughts, tsunamis, earthquakes, hurricanes, cyclones;

* by providing specialists, farmers, researchers, teachers and students with WAICENT, an Internet site that which receives four million visits a month for information and statistics on agricultural production, trade, water, soil and farm inputs;

* through the establishment with WHO of 200 Codex Alimentarius norms to protect consumers and serve as benchmarks for resolving disputes over WTO sanitary and phytosanitary regulations.

4. "The winter planting season, starting end May, early June, will soon be upon us in the Sahel. It lasts three months on average. Let us seize this opportunity because it won't come again for another year." Almost five months ago, on 17 December 2007, FAO drew international attention to the importance of the 2008 harvest, and launched an "Initiative on Soaring Food Prices". It was vital for developing country farmers to have access to the seeds, fertilizer and feed they needed but whose price had increased. The Director-General announced that FAO, despite not being a financing institution, was contributing US$17 million to the initiative to increase agricultural productivity and appealed for the mobilization of US$1.7 billion. Such resources, in cash or kind, go through bilateral or multilateral channels under specific agreements with governments. It is therefore not correct to say that, "FAO in turn announced that it needed US$1.7 billion". FAO's appeal was approved by UN and the Bretton Woods Institutions at a meeting in Berne, Switzerland, from 28 to 29. It is mentioned in press communiqué of 29 April by the UN Secretary-General.

In December 2007 in Senegal, together with development partners and the Ministers for Agriculture, Water management and others, on 22 December 2007 with the media, and then again on 17 March 2008 with the technical and economic ministries, the FAO Director-General held a series of meetings to alert national authorities and public opinion to the risks of a food crisis and to discuss measures needed to present the programme. The meetings were widely covered by the national press. Why were appropriate actions not implemented then?

Relevant Links

5. "The way ahead is clear to that part of the international community which really wants to help - innovative investment agriculture in Africa." In the first year of his mandate in June 1994, the FAO Director-General launched the Special Programme for Food Security now operational in 100 countries. Priority is given to small-scale water harvesting and irrigation works by rural communities. National programmes featuring agricultural policy measures, institutional capacity-building and investment programmes (using a village-by-village approach) were initiated in 15 countries and are under formulation in 36 more. For 14 years the Director-General of FAO has been saying that Africa's "agricultural lottery" has to cease (96 percent of farmland is rainfed while the continent only uses 4 percent of its renewable water resources). He has reiterated time and again that investments should focus on irrigation works, storage and packaging (post-harvest losses range from 40 to 60 percent), rural roads, slaughterhouses, fishing harbours, cold supply chains. All these points are contained in the Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Programme (CAADP) prepared with FAO and adopted by the African Union Summit of July 2003. The costs were evaluated to facilitate the financing. At the request of African leaders, FAO also helped translate the CAADP into national programmes in 51 countries.

Page 1 of 212


AllAfrica aggregates and indexes content from over 125 African news organizations, plus more than 200 other sources, who are responsible for their own reporting and views. Articles and commentaries that identify allAfrica.com as the publisher are produced or commissioned by AllAfrica.

 
Share this on:
Facebook
Digg
Del.icio.us
StumbleUpon
Muti


Make allAfrica.com your home page | RSS Feed

Top | Site Guide | Who We Are | Advertising | Search | Subscribe

Questions or Comments? Contact us. Read our Privacy Statement.

HOME
allAfrica.com


Relevant Links




Fears of Food Shortages in the West
Link Between Crop Failure And Climate Change Often Missed
Govt On Spot Over Biofuel Production
Cattle Disease Traced From Tanzania
Italian Grant for Flood Relief And Fight Against Cholera





Today's Most Active Stories