By Veronica A. Esparagoza
Cebu City, Philippines - More than a hundred local and
national organizations will launch today a national campaign to end hunger in
the Philippines through a forum to be held at the Talamban Campus of the
University of San Carlos in Cebu City.
The idea, according to Pamela
Baricuatro, executive director of the SimplyShare Foundation Inc., one of the
initiating organizations, is to push for more attention to be given by the
administration of Pres. Rodrigo Duterte to the hunger concerns of the country.
With the forum, the organizers
intends to kick off a series of activities all related to what it called as the
Philippine Initiative for Zero Hunger (PIZH) that would lead to the passage of
a law creating the Zero Hunger Commission. “If the hunger problem can be given
attention at a level similar to the one given to the illegal drug problem,
better conditions could definitely be expected for Filipinos experiencing the
lack of food all these years,” Baricuatro said.
Hunger, according to the
Manila-based Stop Hunger Now–Philippines (SHNP), is a serious health concern.
The organization cited a 2013 report that linked the 31,000 deaths among
children under five years old in the Philippines to being underweight which is
the result of malnutrition.
SHNP also cited the increasing number of
Filipinos experiencing hunger in the last 15 years. It noted on the Social
Weather Station report that found 18.3% or around 21 million Filipinos rating
themselves to have experienced hunger in 2014, a big jump from just 8.3% in
1999.
In contrast, SHNP said in its
paper, countries in the ASEAN region saw the reduction of the chronologically
hungry in their respective areas. Laos, it added, reduced its hunger rate by
9.2%, Vietnam by 75.1%, Indonesia by 43.8%, Thailand by 79.8% and Cambodia by
37.8%.
Secretary Jesus Dureza of the Office of the
Presidential Adviser on the Peace Process (OPAPP), the guest speaker of the
forum, is expected to link hunger to the peace problem of the country and
present the proposed solution to the twin concerns.
Dr. Mario Capanzana, director of the Food and
Nutrition Research Institute, will touch on the details of the hunger problems
in the Philippines.
Dr. Armando Parawan, Health and
Nutrition Adviser of Save the Children, will tackle the economic cost of
hunger. (PR/posted by Becky D. de Asis-the Redline News)
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