Put the blame on Shortcut Aziz

I wonder why they did not hold him responsible!

Food crisis may lead to wars, riots: experts

By Anwar Iqbal

http://dawn.com/2008/04/14/images/top01.jpg

WASHINGTON, April 13: The world is moving towards a food crisis that may lead to wars and riots, warn financial experts meeting at the World Bank headquarters in Washington.

“People are dying because of their reaction to the situation,” said Jacques Diouf, director-general of the United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organisation.

The UN agency also warned that this food crisis was not going to end quickly. The World Bank agreed and predicted that prices would remain above 2004 levels through to 2015.

World Bank President Robert Zoellick noted that people living in the developed world struggled with the high cost of fuel to run their cars, while poor people in developing nations struggled to feed themselves.

“In many developing countries, the poor spend up to 75 per cent of their income on food. When prices of basic foods rise, it hits hard,” he said.

The price of wheat had risen 120 per cent over the past year, Mr Zoellick added. Over the past three years, food prices overall have risen 83 per cent, the World Bank estimates.

The crisis of surging food prices could mean “seven lost years” in the fight against worldwide poverty, he said.

IMF managing director Dominique Strauss-Kahn also issued a dire warning about the food crisis and its economic and political impact.

“Food prices, if they go on like they are doing today … the consequences will be terrible,” he said, adding that if they continued, “hundreds of thousands of people will be starving”.

“As we know, learning from the past, those kind of questions sometimes end in war,” he said.

Leading financial experts from around the world warned that food riots and shortages were breaking out in many regions as food shortages threatened millions of people, sparking protests around the globe.

They pointed out that so far there had been deadly riots in a number of countries.

Last week one person was killed in two days of rioting in Egypt, while violence wracked Haiti, where demonstrations over rising food prices led to looting and clashes with police.

In Haiti, the poorest country in the Western hemisphere, the prime minister was ousted on Saturday night after more than a week of violent protests over rocketing food and fuel prices.

The mounting food crisis has moved to the top of the agenda of this weekend’s spring meetings in Washington of the 185-nation World Bank and its twin institution, the International Monetary Fund.

To meet this crisis, Mr Zoellick called for a “new deal on global Food policy.”

For the “immediate crisis,” he urged governments to fill the $500 million food gap identified by the UN’s World Food Programme.

Under the new deal, the World Bank will nearly double agricultural lending to Sub-Saharan Africa over the next year to $800 million to substantially increase crop productivity.

In addition, the International Finance Corporation – the World Bank Group’s arm for private sector development – will boost its agribusiness investments.

Mr Zoellick also proposed that sovereign wealth funds around the world allocate $30 billion –one per cent of their $3 trillion assets – to investments for African “growth, development, and opportunity”.

He noted that rising food prices are also contributing to malnutrition, one of the “forgotten” Millennium Development Goals.

“This is not just about meals foregone today or about increasing social unrest. This is about lost learning potential for children and adults in the future, stunted intellectual and physical growth. Even more, we estimate that the effect of this food crisis on poverty reduction worldwide is in the order of seven lost years. So we need to address this not just as an immediate emergency but also in the medium term for development.

http://dawn.com/2008/04/14/top1.htm

Re: Put the blame on Shortcut Aziz

Damn Musharraf and his food-shortage policies. They should get rid of Musharraf as soon as possible before he causes a worldwide famine!

Re: Put the blame on Shortcut Aziz

Don't think ghunda Zardari & co' will bring ground breaking improvements either.

Re: Put the blame on Shortcut Aziz

So it's wasted on you, eh?

Re: Put the blame on Shortcut Aziz

Pakistan, 35 other states face shortage

By Our Correspondent
WASHINGTON: The world’s financial experts, now meeting in Washington, have placed Pakistan on a list of 36 countries that face a serious food crisis, warning that if the situation worsens people may raid storage facilities for food.

Reports distributed at the World Bank’s spring meetings noted that “in Pakistan and Thailand, army troops have been deployed to avoid seizing of food from the fields and from warehouses”. India, Egypt, Indonesia, Peru, Haiti, Burkina Faso and Mauritania are also on the list of countries where food shortage has already led to deadly riots.

The reports, prepared by various agencies affiliated with the World Bank, sited “insecurity and past floods” for food shortages in Pakistan, adding that it’s among the 36 countries that need immediate external assistance to prevent further deterioration.

Most of the countries on this list -– except India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Afghanistan -– are in Africa and are among the poorest in the world. But a World Bank report also noted that wheat crop prospects for 2008 in Pakistan are quite good. Current indications suggest that the 2008 output may equal last year’s crop. The report, however, said Pakistan did not have a widespread social assistance programme targeting the poorest of the poor.

Re: Put the blame on Shortcut Aziz

Traders from Punjab have already complained about looting of wheat and rice trucks on the super high way.

Re: Put the blame on Shortcut Aziz

Our moulvi sahiban will continue to preach people to produce as many muslims as they can!

Re: Put the blame on Shortcut Aziz

:hehe:

Re: Put the blame on Shortcut Aziz

O I think SOMEONES wasted alright, judging by your first response

Re: Put the blame on Shortcut Aziz

yes.but the people will get benefit only if it is not smuggled to afghanistan…
meanwhile,the reports are that many traders from peshawar and afghanistan have already bought the wheat crop in punjab which will result in a record shortage of wheat in the province this year . they are paying Rs.200 more than the usual price and many of them will harvest the crop too.

Re: Put the blame on Shortcut Aziz

yes.but the people will get benefit only if it is not smuggled to afghanistan…
meanwhile,the reports are that many traders from peshawar and afghanistan have already bought the wheat crop in punjab which will result in a record shortage of wheat in the province this year . they are paying Rs.200 more than the usual price and many of them will harvest the crop too…
government is taking actions but i think we are heading towards another crisis of wheat…:frowning:

Re: Put the blame on Shortcut Aziz

Following is according to Wikipedia (search 'Shaukat Aziz')

In 2001 Aziz was declared 'Finance Minister of the Year' by Euromoney and Banker's Magazine. His term as Finance Minister was associated with accelerating growth in the Pakistani economy and making it one of the fastest growing in the world.

Re: Put the blame on Shortcut Aziz

And???

Have you not noticed the precarious condition the Pak economy is in??

If you have been to Pakistan recently, look at realistic ground realities, not Western platitudes for their agents sent to run Pakistan

Re: Put the blame on Shortcut Aziz

There is a food crisis all over the world, most prominent in asian countries.

Reason: farmers are growing corn, because its more profitable as ethanol is produced from it.

Re: Put the blame on Shortcut Aziz

^ are they growing corn for ethanol even in Pakistan, India and China?

Re: Put the blame on Shortcut Aziz

If he was an agent, then what was I Dar doing in the USA?

Re: Put the blame on Shortcut Aziz

may be you are right,but last year the amount of wheat grown in pakistan was a lot more than the demand..
but poor management,corruption and smuggling resulted in what we are suffering from...hats off to shaukat aziz sahib...

Re: Put the blame on Shortcut Aziz

Well said :k:

Re: Put the blame on Shortcut Aziz

wrong. You are forgetting ‘export’ from the last year. Not everything is smuggled out (there was no need back then). Now it is being smuggled out as it is profitable now. India, also suffering from the food crisis of same magnitude as Pakistan. Who was their Shortcut Aziz?

Re: Put the blame on Shortcut Aziz

Food crisis is everywhere in the world and its causes are broad based and complex. I am sorry but you cannot put blame on Aziz for this one. There is no way he could have prevented it.