FAO Assistant Director-General to Asharq Al-Awsat: 75Mln Arabs at Risk of Starvation by Decade’s End

AbdulHakim Elwaer, FAO Assistant Director-General and Regional Representative for the Near East and North Africa.
AbdulHakim Elwaer, FAO Assistant Director-General and Regional Representative for the Near East and North Africa.
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FAO Assistant Director-General to Asharq Al-Awsat: 75Mln Arabs at Risk of Starvation by Decade’s End

AbdulHakim Elwaer, FAO Assistant Director-General and Regional Representative for the Near East and North Africa.
AbdulHakim Elwaer, FAO Assistant Director-General and Regional Representative for the Near East and North Africa.

A United Nations report shed light on the progress made by countries in the region in achieving the second sustainable development goal pertaining to eradicating hunger, achieving food security and eliminating all forms of malnutrition.

Issued on Thursday, the report, “Near East and North Africa Regional Overview of Food Security and Nutrition 2020,” suggested that the prospects for food security and nutrition in the region were likely to deteriorate due to the massive economic disruptions caused by the Covid-19 pandemic, which has led to an increase in the number of vulnerable people, who are unable to adopt healthy and balanced diets.

In an interview with Asharq Al-Awsat, AbdulHakim Elwaer, FAO Assistant Director-General and Regional Representative for the Near East and North Africa, said that food insecurity and malnutrition constituted a “serious challenge”, noting that the Arab region was still off the right track to achieve the second of its sustainable development goals, which is the eradication of hunger.

“The state of food insecurity and malnutrition in the region is a serious challenge, but we cannot call it a tragedy, firstly because it has clear causes that led to the conclusion that the Arab region is still off the right track required to achieve the second goal of the sustainable development goals,” he said.

Elwaer explained that in the past decades, food insecurity, especially malnutrition, clearly increased in the region for several reasons, the most important of which is the ongoing conflicts.

“It is important to realize that the economic challenges in the region and the state of economic and political instability in many countries contribute significantly to the deterioration of the situation and keeps us away from achieving the goal of eliminating hunger,” the FAO official emphasized, adding that the repercussions of the Covid-19 pandemic have further exacerbated the conditions.

The report predicted that the number of people affected by hunger would reach 75 million by 2030. This forecast may worsen with the ongoing pandemic.

Elwaer said that in the Near East and North Africa region, 5 million Syrians in 2020 were dependent on aid from the United Nations World Food Program. Moreover, Lebanese workers are now competing with the Syrian labor force for jobs in the agricultural sector, which increases unemployment and poverty in rural areas, and thus weakens the access to food.

In southern Yemen, reports indicated that 29.8 million people suffered from acute food insecurity in 2020 due to violence, in addition to the socio-economic conditions that prevailed before the conflict.

Asked whether the FAO had urgent initiatives, in cooperation with other partners, to help the most threatened countries and address the situation, Elwaer said: “It is certain that all UN organizations and programs are constantly working hand in hand to achieve the sustainable development goals by 2030, and this applies to the UN’s endeavor to help the most affected countries to restore their path to achieving them.”

He added that FAO was one of the organizations that was leading global and regional efforts to achieve food security, improve nutrition and develop the agricultural sector. The organization has announced several initiatives, including “Hand-in-Hand”, which aims to accelerate agricultural transformation and sustainable rural development under the leadership of member-states.

Asked whether the most threatened countries could solve their economic crises through technical or material support, Alwaer replied: “I see that the factors that affect economic crises are very complex, and they are interrelated and depend largely on the stability of the political situation and the state of food chains at all geographical levels. But the role of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations is effective and is based on decades of institutional experiences and human competencies in helping countries advance the agricultural, food and sustainable development sectors in general.”

The FAO official emphasized the need for an urgent change in “our current diets and consumption patterns to combat the nutritional problems affecting more than two billion people around the world.”

In this regard, the United Nations Decade of Action on Nutrition (2016-2025) is an unparalleled opportunity for countries and their partners, he underlined.

He noted that the UN Decade of Action on Nutrition was in its fifth year, but the available data showed obstacles that must be addressed urgently, in order to allow countries and partners to achieve the goals of the program, by intensifying efforts and increasing investments in the field of nutrition.

“We work in continuous coordination with partners in the region, for example the Arab League and its subsidiary organizations, and we take into account the nature of the economic and political situation of each country separately,” Alwaer explained.

On the contribution of Gulf states to the various FAO programs, he said: “The countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council make large voluntary contributions to the various programs of the United Nations and the Food and Agriculture Organization in particular.”

“The FAO program in Saudi Arabia is one of the largest technical cooperation programs in the world,” he continued, adding: “In 2019, FAO signed a six-year program worth USD 93 million aimed at enhancing the production, processing and marketing of Arabica coffee, beekeeping, fruit cultivation, fish and livestock breeding, and cultivation of rainfed crops in the country, to become one of the largest resource partners of the organization and the largest contributor in the Near East region.”



Goldrich to Asharq Al-Awsat: No US Withdrawal from Syria

US Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs Ethan Goldrich during the interview with Asharq Al-Awsat
US Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs Ethan Goldrich during the interview with Asharq Al-Awsat
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Goldrich to Asharq Al-Awsat: No US Withdrawal from Syria

US Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs Ethan Goldrich during the interview with Asharq Al-Awsat
US Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs Ethan Goldrich during the interview with Asharq Al-Awsat

Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs Ethan Goldrich has told Asharq Al-Awsat that the US does not plan to withdraw its forces from Syria.

The US is committed to “the partnership that we have with the local forces that we work with,” he said.

Here is the full text of the interview.

Question: Mr. Goldrich, thank you so much for taking the time to sit with us today. I know you are leaving your post soon. How do you assess the accomplishments and challenges remaining?

Answer: Thank you very much for the chance to talk with you today. I've been in this position for three years, and so at the end of three years, I can see that there's a lot that we accomplished and a lot that we have left to do. But at the beginning of a time I was here, we had just completed a review of our Syria policy, and we saw that we needed to focus on reducing suffering for the people in Syria. We needed to reduce violence. We needed to hold the regime accountable for things that are done and most importantly, from the US perspective, we needed to keep ISIS from reemerging as a threat to our country and to other countries. At the same time, we also realized that there wouldn't be a solution to the crisis until there was a political process under resolution 2254, so in each of these areas, we've seen both progress and challenges, but of course, on ISIS, we have prevented the reemergence of the threat from northeast Syria, and we've helped deal with people that needed to be repatriated out of the prisons, and we dealt with displaced people in al-Hol to reduce the numbers there. We helped provide for stabilization in those parts of Syria.

Question: I want to talk a little bit about the ISIS situation now that the US troops are still there, do you envision a timeline where they will be withdrawn? Because there were some reports in the press that there is a plan from the Biden administration to withdraw.

Answer: Yeah. So right now, our focus is on the mission that we have there to keep ISIS from reemerging. So I know there have been reports, but I want to make clear that we remain committed to the role that we play in that part of Syria, to the partnership that we have with the local forces that we work with, and to the need to prevent that threat from reemerging.

Question: So you can assure people who are saying that you might withdraw, that you are remaining for the time being?

Answer: Yes, and that we remain committed to this mission which needs to continue to be pursued.

Question: You also mentioned the importance of humanitarian aid. The US has been leading on this. Are you satisfied with where you are today on the humanitarian front in Syria?

Answer: We remain committed to the role that we play to provide for humanitarian assistance in Syria. Of the money that was pledged in Brussels, we pledged $593 million just this past spring, and we overall, since the beginning of the conflict, have provided $18 billion both to help the Syrians who are inside of Syria and to help the refugees who are in surrounding countries. And so we remain committed to providing that assistance, and we remain keenly aware that 90% of Syrians are living in poverty right now, and that there's been suffering there. We're doing everything we can to reduce the suffering, but I think where we would really like to be is where there's a larger solution to the whole crisis, so Syrian people someday will be able to provide again for themselves and not need this assistance.

Question: And that's a perfect key to my next question. Solution in Syria. you are aware that the countries in the region are opening up to Assad again, and you also have the EU signaling overture to the Syrian regime and Assad. How do you deal with that?

Answer: For the United States, our policy continues to be that we will not normalize with the regime in Syria until there's been authentic and enduring progress on the goals of resolution 2254, until the human rights of the Syrian people are respected and until they have the civil and human rights that they deserve. We know other countries have engaged with the regime. When those engagements happen, we don't support them, but we remind the countries that are engaged that they should be using their engagements to push forward on the shared international goals under 2254, and that whatever it is that they're doing should be for the sake of improving the situation of the Syrian people.

Question: Let's say that all of the countries decided to talk to Assad, aren’t you worried that the US will be alienated in the process?

Answer: The US will remain true to our own principles and our own policies and our own laws, and the path for the regime in Syria to change its relationship with us is very clear, if they change the behaviors that led to the laws that we have and to the policies that we have, if those behaviors change and the circumstances inside of Syria change, then it's possible to have a different kind of relationship, but that's where it has to start.

Question: My last question to you before you leave, if you have to pick one thing that you need to do in Syria today, what is it that you would like to see happening today?

Answer: So there are a number of things, I think that will always be left and that there are things that we will try to do, to try to make them happen. We want to hold people accountable in Syria for things that have happened. So even today, we observed something called the International Day for victims of enforced disappearances, there are people that are missing, and we're trying to draw attention to the need to account for the missing people. So our step today was to sanction a number of officials who were responsible for enforced disappearances, but we also created something called the independent institution for missing persons, and that helps the families, in the non-political way, get information on what's happened. So I'd like to see some peace for the families of the missing people. I'd like to see the beginning of a political process, there hasn't been a meeting of the constitutional committee in two years, and I think that's because the regime has not been cooperating in political process steps. So we need to change that situation. And I would, of course, like it's important to see the continuation of the things that we were talking about, so keeping ISIS from reemerging and maintaining assistance as necessary in the humanitarian sphere. So all these things, some of them are ongoing, and some of them remain to be achieved. But the Syrian people deserve all aspects of our policy to be fulfilled and for them to be able to return to a normal life.