* U.N. to set up task force to handle crisis
* World Bank says export bans make matters worse
* India slaps export tax on basmati rice
* Thailand says to release stockpiled rice
* U.S. President Bush says deeply concerned (adds Ban Ki-moon speech in
Geneva, new paragraphs 11-12)
By Laura MacInnis
BERNE, April 29 (Reuters) - U.N. agencies and the World Bank pledged on
Tuesday to set up a task force to tackle an unprecedented rise in
global food prices that is threatening to spread social unrest.
The international bodies called on countries not to restrict exports of
food to secure supplies at home, warning that could make the problem
worse.
"We consider that the dramatic escalation in food prices worldwide has
evolved into an unprecedented challenge of global proportions," the
United Nations said in a statement.
This had become a crisis for the world's most vulnerable people,
including the urban poor, it said after a meeting of 27 international
agency heads in the Swiss capital, Berne, to chart a solution to food
price rises that have caused hunger, riots and hoarding in poor
countries.
"Though we have seen wheat prices fall over the last few days, rice and
corn prices are likely to remain high, and wheat relatively so," World
Bank President Robert Zoellick told a joint news conference.
Higher costs of wheat, rice, and other staples have put extreme
pressure on aid providers such as the World Food Programme (WFP), a
U.N. agency aiming to feed 73 million people this year.
U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon called on the international
community to provide the WFP all of the $755 million in emergency funds
it needs for the crisis.
"Without full funding of these emergency requirements, we risk again
the spectre of widespread hunger, malnutrition, and social unrest on an
unprecedented scale," Ban said.
Concern about soaring food costs and limited supplies have toppled
Haiti's government and caused riots in parts of Africa.
The task force, bringing together the heads of U.N. agencies, funds and
programmes, the IMF and the World Bank under the leadership of Ban,
will set priorities for a plan of action and make sure it is carried
out.
Ban, speaking later in Geneva, said the crisis threatened to nullify
progress towards reaching ambitious development goals set by the heads
of all U.N. member states in 2000.
The eight-point plan, known as the Millennium Development Goals, sets
targets to alleviate poverty, hunger and disease by 2015. "It threatens
to undo all our good work," Ban said.
WORLD BANK PLEA
The U.N. Food and Agriculture Organisation's (FAO) Food Price Index,
measuring the market prices of cereals, dairy produce, meat, sugar and
oils, was 57 percent higher in March 2008 than a year earlier.
The surge is due to several factors, including increased demand in
developing countries, higher fuel costs, drought in Australia, the use
of crops for biofuels, and speculation on global commodity markets.
U.S. President George W. Bush said he was deeply concerned about high
food prices at home and abroad but felt production of biofuels played
only a small part in the problem.
"And the truth of the matter is, it's in our national interest that we
-- our farmers -- grow energy, as opposed to us purchasing energy from
parts of the world that are unstable or may not like us."
Developing world farmers, often the poorest in their countries, are not
benefiting from the higher prices. They tend to eat most of what they
grow rather than selling it, and higher prices for fuel and fertiliser
are putting them off growing more, World Bank analysis shows.
"Even in some areas where people know that prices are higher, they are
not planting more because they are fearful that they face very high
input costs," Zoellick said.
There was at least some short-term easing in prices of key commodities
on Tuesday.
U.S. rice futures fell more than 2.5 percent, deepening a retreat from
last week's record high as the world's biggest exporter Thailand said
it would release government stocks for domestic use and traders looked
ahead to Asian harvests.
The Thai pledge to release 2.1 million tonnes of stockpiled rice came a
day after a trade official said the country's rice prices were likely
to ease by about 20 percent in coming weeks on increased supply from
the new domestic crop. Rice prices are expected to ease as countries
rush to boost output, but the market is unlikely to return to levels of
recent years, He Changchui, the FAO's Asia head, said in Bangkok.
India slapped export taxes on basmati rice and other products as the
government unveiled a series of moves to tackle inflation fuelled by
the rise in food prices.
The World Bank called on countries not to ban exports of food, saying
that only worsened the problem.
"We are urging countries not to use export bans," World Bank President
Zoellick said in a statement. "These controls encourage hoarding, drive
up prices and hurt the poorest people around the world who are
struggling to feed themselves."
Original
Source
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