AFP
CAMP DAVID — G8 leaders on Saturday pledged
to lift millions of Africans out of poverty by promoting investments in
sustainable agriculture.
"Today we commit to launch a New
Alliance for Food Security and Nutrition to accelerate the flow of private
capital to African agriculture, take to scale new technologies and other
innovations that can increase sustainable agricultural productivity, and reduce
the risk borne by vulnerable economies and communities," the Group of
Eight major industrial nations said.
"This New Alliance will lift 50 million
people out of poverty over the next decade."
The ambitious announcement, contained in a
final communique released after a high-profile gathering on a range of topics,
came a day after President Barack Obama reached out to the private sector for
financial support for the cause.
The initiative also comes as pledges expire
from 2009 in L'Aquila, Italy, where the G8 promised more than $20 billion over
three years to improve food access to Africans and others hit by the high
prices and a global slowdown.
Civil society observers appeared skeptical
about the endeavor's success.
"The G8 have offered warm words on food
security but have failed to make a specific pledge to simply maintain L'Aquila
level financial commitments going forward," said Katie Campbell, senior
policy analyst for ActionAid USA. "In failing to deliver this, they have
turned their backs on the women smallholder farmers who are so vital to food
security in Africa."
Oxfam claimed that input from those directly
concerned had not been taken into consideration.
"Poor countries have presented the G8
country-led, sustainable, and coordinated plans for food security and
agricultural development, but today the G8 gave them the cold shoulder,"
Lamine Ndiaye, the group's Pan Africa Head of Economic Justice, said in a
statement.
According to the G8 communique, the initiative
would, among other things, be guided by "a collective commitment to invest
in credible, comprehensive and country-owned plans."
The Norwegian global firm Yara has said it
would build Africa's first major fertilizer production facility as part of the
initiative. Companies including Pepsi and Dupont have also pledged to invest in
Africa's small-scale farmers.
Copyright © 2012 AFP.
No comments:
Post a Comment