March 12, 2008
Holy See on Hunger in Near East
"Food Security Is the Outcome of a Special Commitment"
CAIRO, Egypt, MARCH 10, 2008 (Zenit.org).- Here is the address
Monsignor Renato Volante, permanent observer of the Holy See to
the U.N. Organization for Food and Agriculture, gave to the 29th
session of the agency's regional conference for the Near East.
The meeting took place March 1-5 in Cairo, Egypt.
* * *
Mr. Chairman,
1. First of all I would like to thank you for the opportunity to
address myself to this 29th session of the FAO Regional
Conference for the Near East. By means of you, Mr. Minister, I
wish also to express my gratitude to the Government of the Arab
Republic of Egypt for the warm hospitality reserved to this
meeting, which has been organized to consider the situation of
food and agriculture in this Region and to provide for specific
indications to cope with its arising needs.
The Holy See, as you all know, pays a particular attention to
those initiatives that are carried out at international level
trying to solve situations of hunger, food deficiencies,
malnutrition, especially when in some areas of the earth an
increase of needs occur. For this reason the Holy See offers the
availability to reflect about the data considered by the
Conference from that ethical point of view which belongs to its
nature and mission.
These data bear witness of the efforts so far deployed by the
FAO and by the Governments to help effectively increase crops
production, safeguard natural resources and implement
agricultural politics, provide for effective and more and more
solving interventions on a long term basis. But the Agenda of
this meeting reminds us that food security is the outcome of a
special commitment in finding the most adequate engagement to
carry out, with effectiveness and coherence, programs that grant
or improve the fundamental right of each individual and
community to be free from hunger. It is about an effort which is
directly involved in the respect of the dignity of the most
vulnerable and disadvantaged and for this reason it cannot leave
us indifferent.
2. The culture in the Near East Region is characterized by a
strong sense of share which leads us to consider the need to
intervene in those situations where a large part of people is
prevented from a full development. Indeed, we must recognize the
central position of the human being in the society and in the
decision making processes and we cannot forget that the rural
development is undoubtedly one of the methods to overcome these
situations. But, just like the FAO indicates, the agricultural
activity and food production must be matched with accurate
choices, appropriate domestic and international politics and
operational guidelines that should be technically supported. To
combine traditional knowledge and practices with the innovative
know-how as a result of technical and scientific progress is no
doubt a challenge for the Countries of this Region. But it
cannot either determine different situations or limit anybody’s
possibilities.
The engagement of this Conference to single out the instruments
to grant the rural development in the long-term, can give
further momentum to such objectives. This means to provide for a
development in the sectors of agriculture, fishery, forestry,
and livestock aimed to grant income and sustainable food
availability. We cannot draw our attention to the long term
without mentioning the overall commitment of the international
Community and in particular of the FAO in obtaining the results
already established by the World Food Summit and confirmed by
the Millennium Development Goals: to reduce the number of hungry
people by 2015.
The situation of food security in the Region is not without
preoccupation even in presence of a general development also on
account of food availability destined to people nutrition. Water
shortage, besides conditioning the agricultural production,
involves the standards of living, with an evident opposition
between the real potentialities and the will to take those
measures that grant not only nutritional standard and food
consumptions but, in a broad sense, social conditions, people
health, especially in those areas which are naturally risking
desertification,
This could mean to give better attention to the small farmers,
often neglected by the institutions and by the cooperation
activities. In the same way, some environmental conditions,
human-induced factors and animal disease compel nomadic
populations to eradicate themselves from their habitat thus
forcing them to food production and livelihoods different from
their traditions.
Mr. Chairman,
3. That of the Holy See Delegation is an invitation to focus the
results obtained during this Conference in a perspective that
involves the human being as a whole, recalling those fundamental
values of history, different cultures, religious experiences and
social life in the Near East Region. These aspects easily
express concepts of justice and solidarity to be put into
practice in politics, rules and actions to fight poverty in all
its material and spiritual dimensions. But it is also necessary
not to relate poverty and food insecurity to mere technical
situations that, although important, could even limit
cooperation and assistance.
This is the wish I express to you, aware of the difficulties,
but also trusting in the capacities of all those living forces
of the Region which are daily engaged in their different
functions and responsibilities.
Thank you.
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