UN Expert Warns of Global Public Health Disaster Caused by Unhealthy Foods UNITED NATIONS, Geneva -- Globalized food systems and the spread of Western lifestyles has spawned an international public health disaster with over a billion people suffering from undernourishment while another billion remain overweight or obese, an independent United Nations expert warned yesterday.

Photo: UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food Olivier De Schutter. Credit: UN Photo/Jean-Marc Ferré
“Our food systems create sick people,” said Olivier De Schutter, the UN Special
Rapporteur on the right to food, as he presented his latest report to the UN
Human Rights Council in Geneva.
“The right to food means not only access to an
adequate quantity of food, but also the ability to have a balanced and
nutritious diet,” he added, while urging governments to uphold their
responsibility in securing their citizens’ right to healthy foods.
In his new report, Mr. De Schutter identified
five priorities for putting nutrition back at the heart of food systems in both
the developed and developing world. They are taxing unhealthy products;
regulating foods high in saturated fats, salt and sugar; cracking down on junk
food advertising; overhauling “wrong-headed” agricultural subsidies making
unhealthy ingredients cheaper than others; and supporting local food
production.
“Urbanization, supermarketization, and the
global spread of Western lifestyles have shaken up traditional food habits. The
result is a public health disaster,” said the expert. “Governments have been
focusing on increasing calorie availability, but they have often been
indifferent to what kind of calories are on offer, at what prices, to whom they
are accessible, and how they are marketed.”
Mr. De Schutter pointed to the accessibility
and abundance of highly-processed foods as a major factor in nutrition-related
illnesses as they tend to be richer in saturated and trans-fatty acids, salt
and sugars.
As a result, he argued, children frequently
become addicted to the junk foods targeted at them. Also, it is the poorest
population groups in wealthy countries that are most affected by processed
foods, which are often more affordable than healthy diets. He further noted that
the export of such Western dietary habits had brought diabetes and heart
disease to the developing world.
“We have deferred to food companies the
responsibility for ensuring that a good nutritional balance emerges. Voluntary
guidelines and piecemeal nutrition initiatives have failed to create a system
with the right signals, and the odds remain stacked against the achievement of
a healthy, balanced diet,” said Mr. De Schutter.
“Ambitious, targeted nutrition strategies can
work,” he added, “but only if the food systems underpinning them are put
right.” Source: UN News Centre
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Updated 07.03.2012 Published by: Magne Ove Varsi
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