UN food
expert praises Cuba's ability to feed its people
The Associated
Press
Tuesday, November 6, 2007
HAVANA:
A U.N. food expert hailed Cuba as a world model in feeding its population, some
18 years after the collapse of the Soviet Bloc ravaged the island's economy and
sparked widespread hunger.
Jean Ziegler, who has been the United Nations' independent investigator on "the
right to food" since 2000, spent 11 days in Cuba on a fact-finding mission,
meeting with top officials and chatting up farmers, state managers and ordinary
Cubans waiting in line for food allotted by ration cards.
"We haven't seen even one malnourished person" — a rare feat in much of
poverty-stricken Latin America, Ziegler said Tuesday. "The right to being fed is
the priority, without a doubt."
Cuba is one of 32 countries that include the "right to food" in their
constitutions, and fewer still — including Brazil, Latin America's largest
economy — meet pledges to provide food to all their citizens, he said.
Ziegler, who visited two prisons in Havana to ask inmates about their daily
diets, did not address human rights concerns over the arbitrary imprisonment and
alleged abuse of political prisoners and critics of the island's one-party
government.
Despite a 46-year U.S. embargo against the communist-run island, Cuba has found
ways to ensure its population does not go hungry, Ziegler said. "Cuba always
invents an answer," he noted.
Widespread daily shortages continue to frustrate Cubans, and the government
blames those — and nearly all other — problems on the embargo. Yet since 2000,
Cuba has been able to purchase food and agricultural products from the U.S. on a
cash basis.
The island still struggles with major deficits in food production, and relies
too much on foreign imports, Ziegler said. But the related need to improve
production capacity has been addressed more openly since July, when interim
leader Raul Castro encouraged people to seek ways to improve efficiency in
farming and other sectors.
Raul Castro has governed Cuba since July 2006, when emergency intestinal surgery
forced his brother Fidel to step aside.
Ziegler's visit marked the third time a U.N. special investigator has been
invited to the island since 1998. The Geneva-based U.N. Human Rights Council
appoints outside experts like him to investigate specific countries or subjects,
giving them wide latitude in their reports.