The singular tragedy is that the ‘paper solutions’ thrown up at these special summits have gone the way of all similar pious platitudes. Multilateral talks on economic issues invariably end up with similar platitudes, only for them to be duly sacrificed in due course at the altar of multilateral expediency. Makes a person wonder if it would have been more expedient to save the money spent on such fanfare and to distribute it among the world’s hungry and deprived souls!
It is a rather sad state of affairs when rich states, after having made ‘solemn’ promises in international forums to ‘eradicate poverty’, actually take economic measures that are expressly directed towards undermining the economies of the poor nations around the world. The rich nations, to use a well worn cliche, are bent upon eating their cake and having it too. The overall impact on the international economic scene thereby amounts to a net transfer of resources from the Third World to the developed world, rather than vice versa as should be dictated by logic.
The problem of hunger and deprivation is still nowhere near an equitable resolution. What is evident even for the man on the street to see and understand is the fact that the rich nations are markedly reluctant to make even a token sacrifice to live up to their high-sounding precepts as expounded in multilateral economic forums. The World Trade Organisation continues to go through its merry-go-rounds of global trade talks.
The United Nations Organisation, too, would do well to wake up from its slumber and face up to the realities. If it is not capable of producing results, then how about calling off the charade of global economic conferences and using the money thus saved to subsidise the poor for a change? How about doing something practical for a change? Could the UN not act to set up a ‘world food reserve’ aimed at providing timely succour to any country or community that faces the threat of famine or food scarcity?
We start with the presumption that there is no shortage of foodstuffs in this world of ours. Shortages are artificially devised to prop up the high prices of food items. In developed countries, farmers are given subsidies to manipulate the market. Surplus food crops are dumped into the sea to prevent a drop in prices. This happens at times when sizeable pockets of the world’s population are facing starvation. The proposed ‘world food reserve’ would aim at buying off such food surplus, storing it and then providing it when needed to the areas in need.
What about the seed money to start such a project, the reader might well ask? One answer is, why not tap the busybody agencies that dole out millions, nay billions, to NGOs in the Third World merely to manipulate public opinion and collect brownie points? A start has to be made somewhere!
Published in The Express Tribune, November 6th, 2013.
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Long on emotion statements - short on anything to back them up.
Back in the 1990's in Delhi I observed that UN and related organisations ( UNICEF, FAO, UNHCR, etc) employees all went around in expensive Land Cruisers and Land Rovers and always had their meetings in 5-star hotels. I always wondered: if these guys are trying to eradicate poverty, first thing they can do is sell their super-expensive cars and get into good old jeeps. Why couldn't they have their meeting in normal government offices and halls? I see UN and it's expensive tax-free high-earning and hi-living bureaucracy a colossal waste.
Or simply do away with immigration laws so people can flow to where resources are.
While the UN has failed when it comes to Security council or General assembly,but in UNICEF,UNESCO and World food program (WFP)-it's work is admirable. OIC(the esteemed organization in your case) has been a static phenomenon.