Pope Francis said recently during the Pre-Summit of the UN Food Systems Summit that the existence of hunger in a world that produces enough food for everyone is “a crime that violates basic human rights,” reported Jurist.
Earlier in July, UN Secretary-General António Guterres said that the COVID-19 pandemic “pushed” an additional
124 million people into extreme poverty, so that about one in three people
around the world did not have access to adequate food in 2020. As many as 811
million people faced hunger in 2020. According to Guterres, global poverty
is expected to be at about seven percent by 2030.
The Pre-Summit
of the UN Food Systems Summit, which is taking place this year from July 26
through 28, focuses on evidence-based and scientific approaches to food systems
transformation. Pope Francis addressed the meeting Monday, stating that the
pre-summit participants had the responsibility of “realizing the dream” of a
world where those in greatest need of basic necessities such as food, water,
and medicine were able to get them first.
Pope Francis said:
We develop new technologies with which we can increase the
planet’s capacity to bear fruit, and yet we continue to exploit nature to the
point of sterilizing it, thus expanding not only external deserts but also
internal spiritual deserts. We produce enough food for everyone, but many
are left without their daily bread. This “constitutes a true
scandal,” a crime that violates basic human rights. Therefore, it is
everyone’s duty to root out this injustice through concrete actions and good
practices, and through bold local and international policies.
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