Nobel Winner Urges Billionaires To Save Millions From Famine
Nobel Winner Urges Billionaires To Save Millions From Famine
The head of the World Food Program, this years winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, again urged billionaires to donate just a few billion to save millions of lives, saying Friday the number of people marching toward starvation has jumped from 135 million to 270 million since the COVID19 pandemic.

UNITED NATIONS: The head of the World Food Program, this years winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, again urged billionaires to donate just a few billion to save millions of lives, saying Friday the number of people marching toward starvation has jumped from 135 million to 270 million since the COVID-19 pandemic.

Humanity needs the help right now, David Beasley said. This is a one-time request. … The world is at a crossroads, and we need from the billionaires to step up in a way theyve never stepped up before.

The executive director of the U.N. food agency told a virtual U.N. press conference that the global wealth of some 2,200 billionaires rose by about $2 trillion between April and July as the pandemic raged. He was referring to a study by Swiss bank UBS and accounting firm PwC published last week which said the global wealth of billionaires climbed from $8 trillion at the start of April to $10.2 trillion in July.

I just need a few billion to save millions of lives and save humanity from one of the greatest catastrophes since World War II, Beasley said. Its not too much to ask.

Asked for names of some of the billionaires he was targeting Beasley replied: I dont get to hang around with that crowd. Im hanging around people who are starving to death.”

He said WFP is greatly concerned about 2021 because budgets werent calculated to take into account the economic fallout from the COVID-19 pandemic.

Beasley said wealthy countries put $17 trillion into economic stimulus packages for their citizens to tackle the coronavirus, and thats $17 trillion that isnt going to be available for 2021.

This year, he said, many governments reached deeper into their pockets while they could and gave the U.N. and its agencies more money, but the governments are now tapped out.

Beasley said debts for middle- and low-income countries were put on hold or deferred until January 2021, and thats $8 trillion worth of debt services” coming due. In addition, remittances from overseas workers to families in developing countries have fallen, and lockdowns are adding to deteriorating economies.

It is an appalling situation, he said.

Beasley said thats why a one-time infusion of cash from the billionaires is so essential for 2021.

He said the humanitarian crises in the world are worsening, with Yemen the worst of the worst of the worst, Africas Sahel region undoubtedly one of the worst, Congo just horrific and Syria deteriorating. He said many other countries are also deteriorating including Nigeria, South Sudan and Ethiopia.

Beasley got COVID-19 in March and has resumed traveling, including to Niger in the Sahel where he was last week when the announcement of the Nobel Peace Prize to the World Food Program stunned and delighted staff and the broader United Nations family.

The WFP chief said he went to the Sahel because nobody is bringing to the world the calamities that are developing in a catastrophic way, and this is a time weve all got to come together.

So all hands on deck, Beasley said. If we dont get the support we need, you literally can be looking at famine in several dozen countries. But if we get the support we need well avert famine.

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