Despite surplus food in the world,
Africa loses $25bn every year to malnutrition, the President of the
African Development Bank and former Minister of Agriculture, Dr.
Akinwumi Adesina, has said.
A statement issued on Monday by the
Communications Officer of Scaling Up Nutrition Movement, Lilian
Ajah-mong, said Adesina made the observations in Abidjan, Cote-d’Ivoire
during the gathering of 900 participants from 60 countries, including
Nigeria, to review progress in tackling malnutrition and share
innovations and best practices to drive progress.
Other participants included
representatives of the government, academia, civil society
organisations, United Nations and the business community.
The 2017 SUN Global Gathering brought
together all SUN Government Focal Points and representatives of their
partners from civil society organisations, donors, United Nations’
agencies, private sector partners, academia, media, parliamentarians and
others.
Nigeria was represented at the Global
Gathering by a team of delegates from four of the five SUN Networks –
government, civil society organisations, donors and business community.
At the event, the coordinator of SUN
Movement, Gerda Verburg, stated that while progress had been made, more
needed to be done as good nutrition was integral to achieving all the
Sustainable Development Goals.
Adesina said, “Africa loses US$25bn a
year to malnutrition. Although there is surplus food in the world, 800
million people live in extreme poverty and hunger globally with about
1.3 billion tonnes of food going to waste every year.
“We need to ensure that community-based
nutrition systems are strengthened; that we enhance general food safety,
especially in the informal food markets that dominate most African
cities.”
Verburg said the SUN Global gathering was for the world to inspire nations to get the food systems right.
She said, “Nutrition is important for
education, nutrition is important for health, nutrition is important for
the economy and to improve the GDP. We need to find instruments to
build collaboration focused on impacts and results and to build
partnerships with the private sector. The challenge of under-nutrition
and obesity is one that behooves on us to build bridges between
countries dealing with these issues to address them.”The UNICEF Executive Director, Anthony Lake, who served as the Chair of
the SUN Movement Lead Group, said “There are 10 million fewer children
who are stunted today than there were when the SUN movement started
seven years ago, but millions of children are still being left behind.”

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