The FAO says two-thirds of the world's hungry live in Asia while in sub-Saharan Africa
one person in three is chronically hungry. The global rise in food prices has pushed
an estimated 40 million more people into hunger this year, the UN food agency says.
The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) says there are now 963 million undernourished
people around the world. The head of the FAO, Jacques Diouf, said the situation
was unacceptable "at the dawn of the 21st Century". He called on the US President-elect,
Barack Obama, to hold a summit next year to put an end to the crisis. "As a result
of rising food prices, 75 million people were pushed into chronic hunger," said Mr
Diouf, who was unveiling an annual report on world food insecurity. "This trend has
continued, dragging an additional 40 million into hunger this year," he said. He
added that for many countries, the Millennium Development Goal of reducing hunger
by half by 2015 was becoming increasingly difficult to achieve. "This sad reality
should not be acceptable at the dawn of the 21st Century," he said. The report says
that although prices of major cereals fell by more than 50% from their peaks earlier
this year, they remain high compared to previous years. Mr Diouf has called on wealthy
countries to invest $30bn (£20bn) a year in agriculture in developing countries. The
agency also warned that reduced demand from industrialised countries due to the global
financial downturn could threaten exporters in developing countries.