WFP ends China food aid, calls for donation (AFP) Updated: 2005-12-15 19:28
The UN's World Food Programme (WFP) said its 26-year program of food aid to
China will officially end this year, and called on Beijing to play a bigger role
as a global donor.
James Morris, the
WFP executive director, speaks during a press conference at the United
Nations' headquarters in Beijing December 15, 2005. Citing China's
achievement in poverty alleviation, Morris said WFP will end food aid to
China. [AP] | "Over the last 26 years, China has
moved more than 300 million people out of poverty by its own standards," WFP
executive director James Morris told reporters while in Beijing for a two-day
visit.
"It's truly one of mankind's great accomplishments over the last 100 years."
The final shipment of food to China was delivered in April, with the program
slated to officially finish by the end of 2005, the WFP said.
The WFP has given China aid valued at more than one billion dollars since
1979, feeding more than 30 million people mostly in remote central and western
regions. China has invested 1.2 billion dollars toward that effort.
The WFP said China now produces and imports enough food to ensure its
population of 1.3 billion people receive an average 3,000 calories a day, "which
is appreciably higher than the world average."
Morris said China, having graduated from aid recipient to donor, should now
share its success with the rest of the world, adding he had already discussed
with Chinese officials how to make the nation a bigger global donor.
"China is an important citizen of the world and as an important citizen of
the world you have all sorts of responsibilities that go along with it," Morris
said on Thursday.
"I'm hoping that over time the World Food Programme will have quite a
remarkable partnership and that together we'll use our strengths and China's
strengths to address the hunger issue around the world."
Beijing has already increased aid for international emergencies, including
relief efforts following the tsunami disaster in Asia last year.
The WFP is negotiating with China for a "stand-by agreement" that would allow
it to use China's emergency response capacity to deal with food crises, Morris
said.
The WFP currently has about 15 such agreements with other countries.
"The world has a lot to learn from China's approach and commitment to the
issue of hunger and poverty," said Morris. "It has one of the best processes for
feeding hungry people. They know how."
Morris said China's help was needed as there were more people around the
world today without adequate nutrition than 15 years ago.
He cited UN figures that 852 million people around the world suffer from
chronic hunger, 300 million of whom are children.
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