Today ONE launches its most ambitious campaign yet – Thrive: Food, Farming, Future. In Africa, this follows our pilot campaign ‘Hungry No More’, which culminated in a petition delivered on 2nd March 2012 in Dar es Salaam to Tanzania President Jakaya Kikwete, signed by over 16,000 ONE members on the continent.
Millions of people die from hunger on the continent every year. In 2011, more than 30,000 children died in just three months due to the famine in the Horn of Africa alone. Millions more continue to be locked in the vicious cycle of hunger and poverty. This year a staggering 178 million young children in the world will be stunted as a result of poor nutrition, their bodies and brains never fully recovering. The numbers are staggering.
A lot of the time we deal with symptoms of a deeper problem hoping it will go away. What we need is to deal with the root causes of hunger and poverty to make sure that these problems become history.
We need your voice to help us urge world leaders—African and donor governments alike—to put in place and fund well tested, costed and affordable plans for smart agriculture and nutrition. Thankfully, there is already, a growing realization in many African communities of the need to go back to farming in order to lift themselves out of poverty. A couple of weeks ago, ONE’s Africa Team had the opportunity to visit a community in KwaZulu Natal (a province in South Africa) where local subsistence farmers said that all they required was assistance from government with the simplest of things, like fencing, farming implements and extension services. For them, the future is in farming and farming is cooler than being jobless in the city. How really cool!
We also had the opportunity to speak with King Goodwill Zwelithini who called upon people in his kingdom to go back to farming and encouraged his chiefs as well as the government to assist people with this, while also calling upon African leaders to make agriculture a priority. Watch our short documentary here:
The onus is on us to collectively use our voices to urge our leaders to make this a priority because we CAN break the cycle of hunger and poverty and put an end to malnutrition for 15 million children, most of who are on our continent. Each one of us has a part to play in making our continent thrive, as we know it can.
There is no lack of political will at national policy level to strengthen food security in rural South Africa. We have so many positive approaches from Conservation Agriculture to Climate Smart Agriculture to Permaculture operating across schools and community gardens all endorsed by various government sectors.
But while resources like seeds, water and fencing are lacking, and there is no consildated approach to helping these small-scale farmers bring their produce to market – subsistence farming will not break the poverty barrier, only support survival.
What is mind boggling is the lack of consistent approach across regions and how government will sometimes assist and sometimes not – with no real clarity on what their criteria are for supporting small farming co-ops. I recently returned from visiting 17 rural community projects in KZN and some had no problem accessing seeds, while others who had ploughed were desperately awaiting seeds for the imminent planting season.
The challenge lies at implementation level. Either way, I support your efforts to bring this issue to the world, and I will keep working at a grassroots level to strengthen these projects one small farm at a time.
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The International ONE Blog is a daily log of the anti-poverty movement. The site is operated by ONE staff, with guest contributions from ONE volunteers, members and allies.
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April 10, 2012 at 09:53
There is no lack of political will at national policy level to strengthen food security in rural South Africa. We have so many positive approaches from Conservation Agriculture to Climate Smart Agriculture to Permaculture operating across schools and community gardens all endorsed by various government sectors.
But while resources like seeds, water and fencing are lacking, and there is no consildated approach to helping these small-scale farmers bring their produce to market – subsistence farming will not break the poverty barrier, only support survival.
What is mind boggling is the lack of consistent approach across regions and how government will sometimes assist and sometimes not – with no real clarity on what their criteria are for supporting small farming co-ops. I recently returned from visiting 17 rural community projects in KZN and some had no problem accessing seeds, while others who had ploughed were desperately awaiting seeds for the imminent planting season.
The challenge lies at implementation level. Either way, I support your efforts to bring this issue to the world, and I will keep working at a grassroots level to strengthen these projects one small farm at a time.