Saturday, April 26, 2008

HIV campaign-Runa Laila

Nov 8, 2006

Bangladeshi celebrity couple joins UNAIDS campaign against HIV/AIDS<

By JULHAS ALAM=
Associated Press Writer=

DHAKA, Bangladesh (AP) _ A Bangladeshi celebrity couple joined hands with the U.N. AIDS agency Wednesday to campaign against HIV/AIDS, officials said.

Runa Laila, one of the country's leading singers, and her actor-husband Alamgir Hossain signed an agreement with UNAIDS to work as "spokespersons" for a year in the South Asian nation, where the prevalence of HIV-infected people is relatively low.

"I am extremely happy to have this opportunity," Laila, who is known beyond Bangladesh as a prolific singer in Bengali, Urdu and Hindi languages, told reporters at a press briefing. "This society has given me much, now it's my turn."

Hossain, who is principally a film actor, said the couple would work hard to raise AIDS awareness among young people, who are increasingly vulnerable to the disease due to lack of information and low awareness of the risk factors, a UNAIDS statement said.

In Muslim-majority Bangladesh, a nation of 144 million people, an estimated 13,000 people are HIV-infected. People in the conservative society are reluctant to talk about sex and sexually transmitted diseases in families or schools.

The infection rate among intravenous drug users is above 4 percent, while it is only about 1 percent among sex workers, according to Health Ministry statistics.

But experts are concerned that the disease could spread from next-door India. With 5.7 million infections, India has the world's largest number of people living with HIV/AIDS. But India's population of more than 1.2 billion means the prevalence rate remains low.

Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Blanket ban on fishing

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/uttorshuri/message/2079

SAN-Feature Service
SOUTH ASIAN NEWS-FEATURE SERVICE
May 6,2004

HUMAN RIGHTS

Blanket ban on netting fish
Ultra poor fishermen in dire distress

By Julhas Ripon

DHAKA:SAN-Feature Service : Thousands of fishermen in Bangladesh are in dire distress due to ‘unlawful’ government ban on netting fishes for six months in the name of protecting the fish species in the major rivers.

When the laws of the lands do not allow the government to impose any blanket ban on netting fish and when there is a rule from the High Court upon the government for allowing the fishermen to catch fish in rivers, the poor fishermen are continuing their struggle to survive.

There is no alternative arrangements from the government for the survival of these ultra-poor .The fishermen, in tousands, have no other option for survival, reveals an investigation of the SAN-Feature Service.

Poor fishermen living in different chars of the world’s largest mangrove forest Sundarban are trapped in ‘dadan’ (debt), as they are not capable of returning borrowed money to the lenders this time due to the abrupt ban on fishing of shrimp fry in the coastal rivers. The dadan is a traditional money-lending system in rural Bangladesh, where the influential money-lenders give the money to the needy in advance and are repaid by products or services.

Following the strict enforcement of the ban since November last, the fishermen are in great distress due to the sudden shrinking of their lone income source . As the indiscriminate fry collection from coastal rivers is destructive, the government banned collection of shrimp fry and other fishes from the coastal belt through promulgation of a law in September 2000, though it was not enforced strictly then .

Villagers at Joymoni under Chandpai Range of the Sundarban, said they were passing their days in dire distress as they are facing both the dadan-wallahs and the police. Some of the dadan-wallahs have already filed cases against poor fishermen complaining that ‘they lent the money during the needy days of the fishermen, but now they are not returning the money’.

The situation is the same in other villages such as Holdeyboni, Bouddabari, Katakhali, Sundartola, Telikhali, Amtola, Kalatola, Keyaboni, Jipdhora, Amarboina and Kuchgonia. The villagers said that about 80 per cent of them have no land to cultivate and, as their main profession is in a critical situation and they have no other alternative to fishing, they are in no position to return the money to the dadan-wallahs.

The villagers of the nearby area mainly used to collect shrimp fry from the river Pashur, a major river that flows through the world’s largest coastal mangrove forest. “We understand the government’s concern, but what will we do to earn a living?” asked Aman Gazi, a fisherman at Joymoni Bazar in Chilai Union Parishad under Chandpai Range.

He said he had a family of five and had no land other than the site of his hut. “Then how can we survive if I am not allowed to catch shrimp fry?” he questioned.

Gazi said he took Tk 20,000 as loan from a local influential shrimp businessman last year, but he could not supply the shrimp fry to him though he had used the money for buying nets and related purposes. “I have only repaid Tk 3,000, but now he wants me to return the rest of the amount,” Gazi said sadly, adding that the money-lender recently threatened him with dire consequences.

The other villagers, who have some arable lands in the area, were also dependent on catching shrimp fry or doing shrimp fry business. They said due to abnormal increase of salinity in the land in the last few years, the production of rice and other crops has declined significantly.

Villager Mohammed Sultan Gazi said that they can produce only eight maunds of Amon rice in one bigha (33 decimals), which is not economically viable. “I am lucky that I have some land, but most of the villagers are in tremendous trouble for lack of cash,” he added.

On the other hand, the dadan-wallahs are also in a dilemma as a huge amount of their money is in the fishermen’s hands. “I lent Tk 2 lakh to the fishermen, but I cannot get back the money from them,” said Sheikh Abul Kashem, a dadan-wallah. “Now I do not know what will happen to my family if I lose the amount.”

The forest department officials said that they have no plan to withdraw the ban as the government has taken the issue seriously.
“We want to continue the ban for the sake of increasing and protecting fish population in the coastal belt,” said Mohammed Ali Kabir Haider, forest conservator in the Khulna Circle.

In Chandpur, the livelihood crisis is in such a state that the ultra-poor fishermen are struggling to feed their family members even once a day after fishing in the Meghna during the lean season was prohibited by the government .

According to the High Court, such a blanket ban does not have the sanction of the law. It has asked the government to show cause within three weeks why this ban should not be declared illegal. It is heart-rending to see the hunger and misery in which they are passing their days.

After having lost their only source of income, they are desperate to catch fish in spite of the ‘threats of the coast guards and local administration’. This may trigger off violence in the area,many fear. These ultra-poor people have not been provided with alternative sources of income during the period of the ban and are facing starvation, said local people.

In the last week of April, some hundreds of fishermen gathered at Jelekandi Para in Shaitnol village at Chhengarchar upazila in Chandpur to protest against the ‘brutality of the coast guards’, who regularly and mercilessly beat them up.

Local people said they are not allowed to catch fish in the stretch of river from Char Bhairabi to Shaitnol (distance between the two places is about 60 kilometres) and from Shariatpur to river Padma (distance about 40 kilometres).

In this area about three lakh ultra-poor fishermen, most of whom are landless, subsist by catching fish. The government slapped the ban as there are allegations that the fishermen catch ‘Jatka’ (fingerlings) in the river during the lean period, but made no alternative arrangement to provide employment to the starving community.

“This river is our blood and soul. Our forefathers have lived on it for ages. But now we are not allowed to fish. The government has made us thieves and criminals by making fishing illegal,” said Mohabir Burmen of Shaitnol village at Chhengarchar.

Like Mohabir, Nirmal Burmen, Haricharan, Fulchan Burmen, Ketuchandra Burmen, Shuvro Burmen feel humiliated, and all of them complain of brutal torture by the coast guards in the area. Narrating his sorry tale in the coast guards’ custody, Shuvro Burmen said that he was caught recently at night while catching fish. “The guards seized my nets, made holes in the hull of my fishing boat and took me to their camp, where they beat me up severely.” Next morning 20 women and two men went to the camp and started wailing to free him from their grip.

“Finally the guards let him go,” said Mohabir. The coast guards also caught Rupchan Burmen and his teenage son Jhotan Burmen in mid-river and tortured them allegedly . In the nearby Ekhlaspur area, where there is a camp of coast guards, two fishermen died recently without getting any treatment after brutal torture by the guards, complained local people.

Though there is a directive of the High Court to the government dated April 3 favouring the fishing communities, the local administration is continuously ignoring the ruling.

The High Court ruled that the fishermen are allowed to catch fish in the river Meghna but they will be punished as per the laws of the land if they are caught catching fingerlings.
The Court also directed the government not to bar fishermen from fishing in general and stop summarily meting out corporeal and other sorts of punishment, such as damaging their boats and burning their fishing nets.

Pleading for the petitioners, well-known lawyer Dr Kamal Hossain told the court that the laws of the land regarding fishing, including the Protection and Conservation of Fish Act, 1950, did not empower the government or any authority to impose such a blanket prohibition.

The present laws empower the government to impose a ban on catching a particular species of fish of specified size during a specified time. But the local administration imposed the ban on catching fish in general without any sanction of the law, he argued.

Dr Kamal told the court that the copy of the official order, if any, was not available to the petitioners, but they are being harassed by the local administration. Their boats have been damaged and fishing nets have been burned even in the presence of State Minister for Education Ehsanul Haque Milan, he argued. Local people said that a section of local influential people are enforcing the ban on fishing to do a brisk business in hilsha fish in the next season.

Fishermen in the locality told the SAN-Feature Service that they recently went to the deputy commissioner of Chandpur and upazila nirbahi officer at Chhengarchar with the High Court’s directive to convince them of the illegality of the ban so that they can fearlessly go to the river and catch fish for survival.But the officials were not convinced and directed the fishermen not to go to the river and threatened dire consequences in case of violation of the ‘administrative order’.

The government has recently distributed some ration to a few starving families in this area. At Jelekandipara in Shaitnol village there are 165 families who have been directly affected by the government’s decision, but the local administration has provided a small amount of support to only 62 families.

“I have received about eight kilograms of rice two times in the last five months from the government,” said Kanon Debi. “I cannot continue the education of my two daughters. Now they do not go to the school as I could not give them Tk 180 for sitting in the last examination in the school,” said Lakshmi Rani.

Considering the gravity of the situation ActionAid Bangladesh has sanctioned a good amount of relief to the poor fishermen and now it is trying to mobilise the fishermen with the help of a local partner.

Mahbuba Akhter, a social activist at Kalipur village in Chhengarchar Upazila, said that the local administration’s attitude towards the poor fishermen is totally negative.

“We are trying to mobilise the fishermen to resist the torture and brutality and to ensure their rights to their very own river,” she said.

She added that they have already talked to the Bangladesh Environmental Lawyers’ Association (BELA) to file a suit against the local administration’s steps of destroying the seized nets and for getting compensation. The Matshajibi Odhikar Rokkha Sangram Committee, a local group of the fishermen, has planned to file contempt of the court case with the High Court soon.-SAN-Feature Service

DCC- Road

http://www.sdnbd.org/sdi/news/general-news/February-2003/25-02-2003/General.htm

DCC snails thru' papers on road repairs

Julhas Ripon, The Daily Star

The Dhaka City Corporation (DCC) is yet to finish the paperwork let alone start repair works of around 2,500 kilometres of rundown city lanes and by-lanes.

Dhaka Mayor Sadeque Hossain Khoka recently said the road repairs would start before the rainy season and will be "complete by March".

Till yesterday, Chairman of the DCC tender committee AZM Shafiqul Islam signed only 250 of the 878 files for road repair works under a Tk 93 crore project, sources said. The files are awaiting the mayor's approval.

A total of 2, 540 kilometres of lanes and by-lanes of the city's 3,200-kilometre road network are unfit for vehicles to ply, sources in the DCC said. The DCC has not repaired the lanes and by-lanes for more than two years.

Commuters say the DCC's dilly-dallying over the launch of road repairs is testing their patience.

Since coming to office last year, the mayor has been promising to do the job, but nothing has been done yet.

The DCC floated the tender for the project in October last year. Work order may initially be issued only for one third of the road repair project due to severe fund shortage, sources said.

Top DCC officials failed to say when the repairs would start. But, sources in the mayor's office said a top DCC official is not signing the files on the pretext of scrutinising the schemes. The tender committee has already cleared the projects.

The top official is also not signing the minutes and recommendations of the tender committee meeting, the sources added.

"The cash crunches is not a big obstacle to starting the repairs.

Instead, it is bureaucratic tangle which is delaying the work," said an official, preferring anonymity.

He added that if necessary the DCC would consider allocating funds from other projects since the road repairs is urgent.

"A handsome amount of money can be channelled from the Environment Improvement Project," he added.

At present, the Roads and Highways Department (RHD) is conducting a main road repair project under the Dhaka Urban Transport Project. But hundreds of alleys, link roads, and lanes and by-lanes are being ignored.

Also, the pressure of rickshaws recently increased on these alleys, lanes and by-lanes, as some major thoroughfares have been made off-limits to rickshaws.

The commuters, especially the women and children, suffer greatly due to worn-out carpets and potholes causing tedious traffic congestion.

For instance, lanes and by-lanes in East and West Rajabazar, Indira Road, Tejkunipara, Green Road, Free School Street Road, Kanthalbagan, Bhuter Goli and Central Road have seen increased pressure of rickshaws.

Even Banani and Uttara, said to be designated residential areas, have similar problems.

Commissioner of DCC Ward No.40 at Tejkunipara in Tejgaon Anwaruzzaman Anwar said the residents of his area have complained to him about the rundown roads and the delay in the repairs.

He added Tk 1 crore was allocated for works in his area.

Commissioner of Ward No.1 in Uttara Hafizul Islam Kusum said he is yet to receive the work order to start work worth around Tk 2.50 crore.

Clean Dhaka

http://www.bcas.net/Env.Features/Energy/2003/December2003/15%20to%2030.htm

Master plan envisages ‘clean’ Dhaka by 2015
Julhas Ripon

The Dhaka City Corporation and the Japanese International Cooperation Agency have started formulation of a comprehensive, modern and environment-friendly solid-waste management plan for a ‘clean Dhaka by 2015’.

The Clean Dhaka Master Plan will deal with different aspects of solid-waste management and focus on a strategy of reduction, recycling and reuse.

The plan will be submitted to the government in January, said Mayor Sadeque Hossain Khoka on Wednesday.

The mayor was earlier briefed about the inception report on the master plan by experts and officials of JICA and the DCC counterpart personnel unit.

Japanese ambassador to Bangladesh Matsushiro Horiguchi and JICA resident representative Takashi Sakamoto were present at the briefing, and so were former chief executive officer A.Z.M. Shafiqul Islam and chief conservancy officer of the DCC Sohel Faruquee.

The 16-member counterpart personnel unit, led by Anwar Hossain Patwary, and JICA experts are conducting a study of the 360-square-kilometre corporation area and newly-urbanised areas on its outskirts to formulate the plan.

A joint study, conducted by JICA and the DCC in 2000, found that the city generated everyday about 5,000 tonnes of sold waste, more than 80 per cent of which is biodegradable domestic waste.

If the population growth continued at the current rate, the daily volume would be no less than 11,000 tonnes by 2015, says the study.

The planned master plan will address different technical, institutional and social issues to establish a sustainable mechanism of scientific solid-waste management.

The plan will also suggest how technology transfer through close collaboration with counterpart personnel unit can be ensured.

The joint team will pinpoint technical issues related to collection, transportation, recycling, immediate treatment and disposal of garbage to meet the ‘clean’ Dhaka target.

JICA officials also said they would work for capacity building of the corporation’s solid waste management cell, enriching its survey skills for comprehensive planning knowledge, selection and evaluation of technologies.

After preparatory works, the joint team will start fact finding and situational analysis.

At this stage of activities — between December 2003 and March 2004 — the team will conduct surveys, visit different sites, talk to stakeholders, and collect and analyse relevant data.

“We will work with a participatory approach where all stakeholders would be consulted to make the plan sustainable,” said Kihachiro Urshibata, deputy leader of the JICA study team, during a presentation.

Patwary read out a statement detailing the background of the master plan formulation process.

The corporation currently collects, transports and dumps solid waste generated everyday in the city without following any scientific procedures, said the co-ordinator of the waste management cell and the counterpart personnel unit.

“The corporation is working with JICA through mutual co-operation for smooth implementation of the study and effective use of the study results,” said Patwary.

The mayor thanked the Japanese government for extending co-operation in different development sector, especially in the environment sector. “We appreciate the current move and hope that the study will help us identify the problems and formulate proper action plan to fulfil our dream of clean city in near future.”

Horiguchi was appreciative of some recent DCC moves to solve the garbage problems and stressed community participation in all the process.

“We hope both the counterparts will work together to make the study a success,” said the Japanese ambassador.

Later, the ambassador along with JICA team members and DCC officials visited the corporation’s official dump site at Matuail to have a close look at the current waste-disposal system.

Source: New Age, December 18, 2003

Nishorgo Project

http://www.bcas.net/Env.Features/Biodiversity/2004/march2004/1%20to%2015.htm

Nishorgo project launched to protect reserve forest, biodiversity
Kazi Shahnaz with Julhas Ripon

The Ministry of Environment and Forest, with the goal of protecting the country’s fast disappearing reserve forests and biodiversity, formally launched a conservation project on February 24.

Minister for Environment and Forest Shajahan Siraj inaugurated the project, titled “Nishorgo”, in the presence of diplomats, representatives of different government departments and international donor and money lending agencies, local government representatives and journalists at a ceremony in the Bhawal National Park in Gazipur.

With the financial assistance from the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and the Asian Development Bank (ADB), the Department of Forest and Environment will implement the project to improve the management status of the country’s protected forest areas which are under constant threat of human encroachment.

The “protected areas” include safari parks, wildlife sanctuaries, national parks and game reserves.

The Nishorgo programme is also designed to deal with the sharing of economic benefits by the stakeholders, formalisation of processes for reducing local conflicts over protected areas, installation of visitor amenities, refinement of the policy framework for management of protected areas, facilitation of eco-friendly private sector investment that can provide key services to the protected areas and support for applied research on protected areas that can improve future planning.

The minister announced that the project would be implemented through the adoption of a new management strategy, called ‘co-management’. The term ‘co-management’ means ‘a situation in which two or more social actors negotiate, define and guarantee amongst themselves a fair sharing of the management functions, entitlements and responsibilities for a given territory, area or a set of natural resources’.

The environment minister emphasised the importance of establishing partnerships between the ministry and the forest department working on its behalf with key stakeholders such as the people living around the protected areas, private businesses, other ministries, international donors, the conservation community or the indigenous people. “We will ensure effective partnership of all the local and national stakeholders in the management process under this project, where the matter of providing alternative income-generating opportunities to those presently living on forest resources will be included,” said Siraj.

The programme was also addressed by Environment Secretary Syed Tanveer Hussain, US Ambassador Harry K. Thomas, Deputy Director of USAID local mission Bath Paige and Chief Conservator of Forest M. Anwarul Islam.

Initially, the forest department will implement the project in five protected forest areas out of 16, which include Lawachhara National Park, Rema Kalenga Wildlife Sanctuary in Sylhet, Satchuri Reserve Forest, Teknaf Game Reserve in Cox’s Bazar and Chunati Wildlife Sanctuary in Chittagong.

Thomas reminded the audience that Bangladesh is a ‘bellwether for the world-wide challenge of balancing population growth with a need for economic growth and a limited environmental resource base’. “Bangladesh is endowed with productive land resources. I strongly believe that the Nishorgo programme has the potential in the next few years to transform the protected forest areas into biodiversity sources of global standing, which will give Bangladesh much greater stature at international environmental negotiation tables,” said Thomas.

He said that Bangladesh and the USA had signed an agreement under a debt-for-nature swap mechanism in 2000 under which a foundation called “Arrannayak” was established to administer small grants programme for tropical forest conservation in Bangladesh. “With all these issues I am pleased to see that the government is taking an important step through the Nishorgo programme to establish environmental good governance,” he added.

Environment Secretary Syed Tanveer Hussain said that the envisaged goals would not be limited to words only, rather the project would prepare the ground for the institutional improvements that can emerge from this partnership process of the co-management system.

“The threats to protected areas come from various sources and many types of people. We recognise that we must build partnerships to address the threats, and that we must take advantage of the best in technology to achieve our goals through capacity building of the departments concerned,” Hussain added.

Source: Weekly
Holiday, March 05, 2004

Sunday, April 20, 2008

Bali-Climate Change


Dec 12, 2007

While the West protects itself against global warming, the poor beg for help

By MICHAEL CASEY

AP Environmental Writer

BALI, Indonesia (AP) _ Surrounded by rising seas and short of water, the glitzy city state of Singapore has built one of the world's largest desalination plants and is paying Dutch experts tens of millions of dollars (euros) to devise ways to protect their island.

Bangladesh, meanwhile, is digging out from a cyclone that killed at least 3,200 and left millions homeless. The impoverished country wants to build up its coastlines to ward off the potentially devastating impacts of global warming, but has no money.

The disparities between the rich and poor in adapting to encroaching oceans and the floods and droughts that are expected to worsen with rising temperatures have dominated the U.N. climate conference on Indonesia's resort island of Bali.

The haves _ which pump the lion's share of pollutants into the atmosphere _ are arguing about emission targets and high-tech solutions. The have-nots _ which contribute little to global warming but are disproportionately among the victims _ need tens of billions of dollars (euros) to save their sinking islands, to help farmers adapt and to relocate those in the path of destruction.

"The issue of equity is crucial. Climate affects us all, but does not affect us all equally," U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon told delegates from nearly 190 nations Wednesday. "Those who are least able to cope are being hit hardest. Those who have done the least to cause the problem bear the gravest consequences."

The United Nations Development Program says 98 percent of the 262 million people hit by disasters from 2000 to 2004 came from impoverished countries, while the money to prevent disasters in the United Kingdom alone was six times what was spent in all poor countries.

The number of people affected by natural disasters has quadrupled over the past two decades _ from famines in Africa to floods in South Asia, according to Oxfam International, though it is not clear how much of that is due to global warming.

But with scientists predicting that temperatures could rise by as much as 5 degrees Celsius (9 degrees Fahrenheit) things are only expected to get worse.

The U.N. predicts that about 1.8 billion of the most vulnerable people across the globe will be hit by water shortages, 600 million more will go hungry and 32 million will be displaced by droughts and floods.

"Poor countries have really urgent priorities _ putting food on the table, accessing water, health care," said Antonio Hill, a climate change expert with Oxfam. "On all these issues, climate change is making these things worse."

From Venice to New Orleans, the West is already taking action to fight climate change within their borders.

Canada said Monday it would spend US$85.4 million (euro58 million) on adaptation measures, including tens of millions of dollars (euros) to help its Inuit communities adapt to warming Arctic climate.

The low-lying Netherlands _ which for centuries has built a vast network of canal systems, experience it is now passing on _ is spending an additional US$25 billion (euro17 billion) to improve its water defenses. Italy is doing the same.

Singapore, meanwhile, has built a 139 million desalination plant to boost its domestic water supply and teamed up with the Dutch engineering firm Delft Hydraulics as part of a more than US$208 million (euro141 million) effort to become a hub for climate change research _ much as it has for biotech and the medical industry.

The tiny city-state is itself vulnerable to global warming, but also realizes that "there is great potential to make money," said Peter Ng, who is part of the Dutch partnership called Singapore Delft Water Alliance. "If we play our cards right and do what we do well, other countries will come to us for help."

Poor nations, in the meantime, are doing what little they can.

Some are creating early warning systems, building bamboo storm shelters on stilts or making plans to relocate island communities. But the money often does not reach villages hardest hit by worsening floods and the rising seas.

In Kaoakola located along Bangladesh's Jamuna River, for instance, Mohammad Sheikh complains he has been forced to move his house three times because of increased floods.

"We're very poor. We can't afford it," the 70-year-old said, adding that he has been forced to become a day laborer after his 300 acres were lost to flooding. "The river, the floods have taken everything from me."

The Maldives _ a popular tourist destination made up of more than 1,000 low-lying islands _ also exemplifies the limits of good intentions in developing countries. It has rolled out plans to move communities to a few, well-protected islands, but so far has only been able to come up with the money to build up one such island.

"Climate change has become a daily reality in the Maldives and other small island states," said the country's president, Maumoon Abdul Gayoom, recalling how his islands were being hit by storm surges and erosion while fish were dying of mysterious diseases.

Even if the maximum suggested assistance is approved, it won't cover the costs.

Only up to US$300 million (euro203.9 million) annually will be available through a U.N. adaptation fund expected to be created in Bali and up to US$1.5 billion (euro1 billion) a year if an international climate agreement to succeed the Kyoto Protocol, which expires in 2012, is approved.

That still falls far short of the nearly US$86 billion (euro58.4 billion) the UNDP estimates is needed annually by 2015, prompting some to suggest that additional mechanisms, such as a tax on bunker fuels or, as Oxfam demands, funding targets for industrialized countries.

Impoverished nations are also demanding a post-Kyoto agreement offer of increased access to technology for adaptation and assurances the money for climate response won't be taken from already meager development aid.

"The money they put up for this adaptation fund is peanuts. It's nothing," said Khandaker Rashedul Haque, a Ministry of Environment comparing his problems in Bangladesh to those of New Orleans, which is still recovering from Hurricane Katrina.

"Why are they putting up a few billion for a city like New Orleans when they are putting up a few million for the entire world?"

Associated Press Writer Julhas Alam in Dhaka, Bangladesh contributed to this report.

Saturday, April 12, 2008

Food crisis


http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/feedarticle/7457326

Food Crisis Looms in Bangladesh

  • AP foreign
  • , Saturday April 12 2008

By JULHAS ALAM

Associated Press Writer

DHAKA, Bangladesh (AP) - For a 13-year-old boy in this impoverished, teeming city, some things are more important than classes - rice, for one.

``I need to eat first, then school,'' said Mohammad Hasan, standing at the back of a line of hundreds of people waiting to pick up government-subsidized rice.

With the price of food skyrocketing around the world, desperately poor and overpopulated Bangladesh is considered one of the world's most vulnerable nations.

An adviser to the country's Ministry of Food, A.M.M. Shawkat Ali, warned of a ``hidden hunger'' in Bangladesh and economists estimate 30 million of the country's 150 million people could go hungry - a crisis that could become a serious political problem for the military-backed government.

``We fear some 30 million of the ultra poor will not be able to afford three meals a day'' said Qazi Kholiquzzaman Ahmad, a leading economist in Dhaka, the capital.

Bangladesh already faces a decrease in arable land due to industrialization and the ever-growing population. Its low-lying land also is reeling from major floods and a devastating cyclone last year that destroyed some 3 million tons of food crops and left millions homeless and hungry.

The price of rice, the core of the Bangladeshi diet, has jumped by more than 30 percent since then - a major problem in a country where nearly half the population survives on less than $1 a day.

Approximately 10,000 textile workers demanding better wages to meet the higher food prices clashed with police near the capital on Saturday, said police station official Angur Akter.

Dozens of people, including at least 20 police officials, were injured in the violence, Akter said. Their exact number and conditions were not immediately known.

The government, which has ruled Bangladesh since January 2007, has responded to the shortages with varying degrees of success. It has opened more than 6,000 outlets distributing rice at roughly half the market price and announced plans to open more.

But ``the government failed to build enough stock of food immediately after last year's disasters, and because of that the situation has become volatile,'' said Ahmad, who heads an independent think tank, the Bangladesh Development Council.

``The government needs to build a buffer stock immediately. If the government fails, the situation will worsen,'' he said.

Major opposition parties have recently threatened street protests if the government fails to rein in rising prices and growing discontent could threaten the political balance.

India has agreed to ship 400,000 tons of heavily discounted rice to Bangladesh, but it could take weeks to arrive and officials are uncertain it will be enough. Because of high food prices, the Asian Development Bank warned that inflation could reach 9 percent by June.

Bangladesh is far from the only country with food problems. There have been riots in the African nations of Burkina Faso, Mauritania, Mozambique and Senegal. Rising prices have hit poor countries like Haiti and Peru and even developed countries like Italy and the United States.

A confluence of problems are driving up prices. They include soaring petroleum prices, which increase the cost of fertilizers, transport and food processing; rising demand for meat and dairy in China and India, resulting in increased costs for grain, used for cattle feed; and the ever-rising demand for raw materials to make biofuels.

As of December, 37 countries faced food crises, and 20 had imposed some sort of food-price controls. The U.N.'s World Food Program says it's facing a $500 million shortfall in funding this year to feed 89 million needy people.

World Bank President Robert Zoellick warned that prices could continue to rise for several years.

``This is not a this-year phenomenon,'' Zoellick said.

In Bangladesh, leaders are scrambling for solutions. Last week a senior official suggested people eat potatoes instead of rice.

Abdus Sobhan, a construction worker, who had spent hours waiting in the heat for discounted rice, dismissed the notion.

``It's better his family starts first, then we can think if we will change our habit of eating rice,'' he said. ``We can't bear it anymore.''