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Eliminating wars key to eradicating hunger, says FAO chief on Peace Day

Zoom in font  Zoom out font Published: 2018-09-25  Views: 8
Core Tip: Ridding the world of wars is an essential step in eradicating hunger.
Ridding the world of wars is an essential step in eradicating hunger. This was stated by Jose Graziano da Silva, director general, Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), in a statement to honour the International Day of Peace.
 
“Peace and the end of conflicts are fundamental in the battle against hunger, which is FAO's constant goal,” he added.
 
The day has, since 1982, been sanctioned by the United Nations. Peace also explicitly figures in the 16th goal of the Sustainable Development Agenda. Global peace was the subject of a high-level plenary meeting, held recently to help kickstart the United Nations General Assembly.
 
“The second Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) calls for the eradication of hunger by 2030. The number of hungry people in the world has been rising in recent years,” according to FAO's benchmark reports on the matter.
 
“Conflict and instability are among the main causes,” Graziano da Silva said, noting that 60 per cent of those facing hunger lived in countries affected by war or civil unrest.
 
“The evidence is clear,” he said, adding, “If conflict increases, hunger increases. The relationship is direct.”
 
“FAO is enhancing its efforts to contribute to keeping and sustaining peace, notably through programmes designed to foster social cohesion, protect and bolster livelihoods and support recovery, reconstruction and rural development to generate mutually-reinforcing cycles,” Graziano da Silva said.
 
He added, “Agriculture can be an engine of stabilisation and recovery for people living in fragile contexts.”
 
“I am convinced that our efforts to both save lives and livelihoods - by fostering long-term resilience - are important contributions to peace and stability within countries, across regions and beyond,” the FAO director general said, adding that not only was peace a precondition for food security, but agriculture and food security could contribute to peace as well.
 
 
 
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