Humanitarian aid alone is not enough to address hunger, says new Vice President of UN agency IFAD
Rome, 3 August 2020 – We are failing in our response to increasing hunger levels by
focusing predominantely on humanitarian aid, said Dominik Ziller, the new Vice President of the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) who took office today.
“We
know that COVID-19 is going to dramatically increase hunger and
poverty, particularly in rural areas. This is because most rural people
depend on agricultural supply chains for their incomes and food, and
these supply chains are being disrupted,” said Ziller. “It is not enough
to respond with humanitarian assistance alone. We have to build
crisis-resilient supply chains, otherwise people will keep going to bed hungry.”
According to the report on the State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World released
last month, hunger has increased in the past five years, and the impact
of the COVID-19 pandemic is expected to leave an additional 83 to 132
million people hungry by the end of the year.
IFAD
is an international financial institution and specialized agency of the
United Nations dedicated to eradicating rural poverty and hunger in
developing countries. Ziller, a
German national and the former Director General for International
Development Cooperation at the German Federal Ministry for Economic
Cooperation and Development (BMZ), starts his new role at IFAD at a
pivotal time.
“Five
years ago we, the global community, made a promise when we adopted the
Sustainable Development Goals. We are completely off track in achieving
Zero Hunger, and we only have 10 years left to fulfil our promise,” said
Ziller. “But we can’t put our hands in our laps and give up. We have
to go the extra mile. And that is why I am very pleased to join IFAD –
an organisation that I believe can really help build a world without
hunger.”
The
majority of the world's poorest and hungriest people live in rural
areas and depend on agriculture and related activities for their
livelihoods.
As the second in command of the Fund, Ziller will provide counsel and
support on IFAD’s strategic direction and all aspects of its operations
and activities, and will help strengthen the political and financial support for IFAD among Member States.
In his previous role at BMZ,
Ziller’s responsibilities included the European Union's development
cooperation, and the development processes of the G7 and the G20.
During Germany's G20 Presidency, he chaired the Development Working
Group. He previously worked for the German development agency Deutsche
Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ), where he was a
member of the Executive Management Committee.
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