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Malnourished Indian children (no names available) eat a meal at the Apanalaya center, an organization working for the betterment of slum children, in Mumbai, India, Tuesday, Oct. 9, 2012. Rafiq Maqbool/AP/Press Association Images

Hunger remains 'major' global threat to world’s poorest and most vulnerable

The newest Global Hunger Index shows the unsustainable use of land, water, and energy are the biggest factors affecting the food security of the most vulnerable people around the world.

HUNGER ON A global scale remains a major threat to the world’s poorest people, with twenty countries having levels of hunger that are now classed as “alarming” or “extremely alarming,” according to this year’s Global Hunger Index.

The Annual Index report found that the unsustainable use of land, water, and energy are the biggest factors affecting the food security of the most vulnerable people around the world.

Two of the three countries with extremely alarming levels – Burundi and Eritrea – are in sub-Saharan Africa; the third country is Haiti. South Asia is the other region that continues to suffer from the highest levels of hunger.

The Global Hunger Index (GHI) report presents a multidimensional measure of global, regional, and national hunger using data data from the Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations (FAO), the World Health Organisation (WHO), the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), various national demographic and health surveys, and International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI).

A woman sits next to a pot full of dried mud cookies in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Thursday, Jan. 20, 2011. The mud cookies are made of dirt, salt and vegetable shortening and are one of very few options the poorest people have to stave off hunger. (AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd)

The seventh annual report shows that, despite the proportion of hungry people around the world declining since 1990, global hunger remains at a level characterised as ‘serious’.

The Index is published for the seventh year by Concern Worldwide, the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), and German non-profit development organisation Welthungerhilfe

Speaking at the launch of the report, entitled The Challenge of Hunger – Ensuring Sustainable Food Security under Land, Water, and Energy Stresses, Shane McEntee TD, said: “Last year, in addition to the ongoing programmes funded by Irish Aid, my Department provided almost €8.5 million to the World Food Programme for emergency actions and for protracted relief and recovery. We recognise the need to deal with emergencies as they occur and the special funding we provided to Haiti at the beginning of last year shows our commitment to this cause”.

The Minister also referred to the guidelines agreed by the FAO’s Committee on Food Security last May, which were aimed at helping governments to safeguard the rights of people to own or access land, saying it served as “a mechanism for consensus-building at international level and policy promotion at national level.”

Read: Ireland to provide €3 million in vital aid to Somalia>
Read: Generation of North Koreans ‘stunted and malnourished’>

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6 Comments
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    Mute Joe Walshe
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    Oct 11th 2012, 2:11 PM

    Hunger in many developing countries and Obesity and associated illnesses in other countries.
    makes you wonder.

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    Mute Maria
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    Oct 11th 2012, 3:11 PM

    Obesity also becoming an issue in some developing countries, believe it or not.

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    Mute Z?
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    Oct 11th 2012, 3:34 PM

    Obesity and malnutrition are not opposites.

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    Mute Vinnie Mulvihill
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    Oct 11th 2012, 3:52 PM

    no wounder when money raised to help them is used on these go out to a third world country for two weeks and put in wster supplies etc would it not be cheaper to hire people from the countrys and let them do it instead of flying people out paying for hotels etc and it would leave more in the pot for the needy..a weeks wages is probably 10 but hundreds are used to send one person out..these countries must have trades men and if not it would be cheaper to train them

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    Mute Margaret Doyle Hanley
    Favourite Margaret Doyle Hanley
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    Oct 11th 2012, 6:50 PM

    When you think of all the money we’ve given to all the charities, it’s easy to reason that your money has gone into the charity bosses pockets and not gone to where you meant it to go. Please, please , look for non-profit charities who can’t afford to advertise.

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    Mute Frank2521
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    Oct 11th 2012, 4:03 PM

    There are a lot of people in Ireland fat. There are also a lot of people hungry. It says it all about our society.

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