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WFP Lauds Calls To Revamp U.S. Food Crisis Policy

UN agency lauds think-tank plan to revamp US policy on global food crisis

31 July 2008 - The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) today praised a new report by a Washington-based think-tank which calls for the United States to take a fresh strategic approach to the global food crisis.

The report, from the Center for Strategic and International Studies, outlines a plan of action which it says any US administration could embrace on a bipartisan basis. It recommends a doubling of emergency assistance and making rural development and agricultural productivity new foreign policy priorities.

"This challenge cannot be solved without US leadership. This study is a roadmap, a wake-up call," WFP Executive Director Josette Sheeran said during the report's presentation this week in Washington.

Ms. Sheeran also highlighted the report's call for a modernization of the global food aid system. Improving the "speed, agility, liquidity and flexibility" of that system was a challenge not only for the US but also for the world, she said.

"Food security is so fundamental to human existence that it is not only a humanitarian issue but also perhaps the key security issue of our time."

With food prices expected to remain high, the UN has set up a task force, chaired by Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, to promote a comprehensive solution to the global food crisis. Its action plan provides for long-term solutions, such as boosting agricultural production, but also short-term measures to meet the immediate needs of the hungry poor who have been most affected by high food prices.

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The WFP said that, according to most estimates, food prices will remain high at least until 2012.

ENDS

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