Despite extensive global economic growth in recent decades,
including in some of the poorest countries in Africa, millions of people remain
locked in a vicious cycle of hunger and poverty, malnutrition and poverty are
two sides of a coin that are ravaging the African continent.
Outlined below are my basic solutions to ending hunger in the Sub -
Saharan Africa;
Economic growth and wealth is necessary to make progress in
reducing poverty and hunger, especially in the face of an expanding population.
But governments need to do more than pursue economic growth. The key factor in
ensuring food security is inclusive growth – growth that promotes access for
everyone to food, assets and resources.
Improving government policy, increasing political will and
application of community adapted strategies in tackling this issue is
fundamental. It should be recognized, not only as a public health issue, but as
a fundamental human right especially for children to eat. Starting life
disadvantaged with adverse consequences from malnutrition (ill health, mental
retardation, high malnutrition related morbidity and mortality resulting
especially from under-five deaths) is a neglected but serious developmental
hindrance to Sub - Saharan Africa.
The fight against corruption must cease to be lip service
but actually get effective.
The use of modern agricultural techniques to increase food
production is very essential. Provision or subsidization of the ministries of
Agriculture to provide fertilizers, use genetically modified foods to resist
adverse weather conditions and improve yield could be possible solutions to be
investigated.
Improvement of the transport system to give access to locals
to sell their local produce to raise incomes for their families is important.
Base Line surveys to determine and understand sociocultural
peculiarities of each community during implementation of particular programs
are vital. Avoidance of vertical programs could be of great help.
The ministry of environments of countries must engage in
programs to protect the environment which continues to be degrading. Feasible
and sustainable irrigation programs should be scaled up especially in drought
affected regions.
The solution to this problem of malnutrition in developing
countries entails a multisectorial approach with well defined and achievable goals.
The ministries of health, education, agricultural, environment, universities
and research organizations and other non-governmental organizations or
international donors must work together if any tangible outcomes are expected.
Further research involving the potential acceptability of
new agricultural technologies, modern farming methods and genetically modified
foods in a Sub Saharan African context should be undertaken. Understanding the
socio cultural peculiarities of the milieu is fundamental. It might be
difficult and unproductive implementing some health promotion programs,
especially when they are very vertical and culturally inadapted. Implication of
the community representatives in the programs from the early planning stages
could be key determinants of program ownership, acceptability and
sustainability.
Governments need to
adopt an integrated approach to effectively reduce hunger, food insecurity and
malnutrition in sub-Saharan Africa. They also need to implement a mix of
complementary and comprehensive food security and nutrition policies and
programmes.
In conclusion, greater urgency in building resilience of
households, communities and countries to climate variability and extremes is
needed. We need to face myriad of challenges to building institutional capacity
in designing, coordinating and scaling up actions for risk monitoring and early
warning systems, emergency preparedness and response, vulnerability reduction
measures, shock-responsive social protection, and planning and implementing
resilience-building measures.
Strategies towards climate change adaptation and disaster
risk reduction must be aligned as well as coordinated with interventions in
nutrition and food systems across sectors.
There should also be political will of all African leaders
towards advocating nutrition. When the leaders advocate, it indirectly becomes
a directive.
I strongly believe that no one should suffer from a lack of
access to quality and nutritious food – but they do. The number of hungry people is
reducing. But it’s still 240 million too many in Africa alone. We are at a
critical point where we can harness the power of individuals, communities and
local governments to end hunger.
We also need to bring together leaders from the private
sector, civil society to trigger cooperation that benefits farmers and the
general population
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