G8 summit tackles hunger in Africa

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G8 leaders, including an Africa-bound Barack Obama, vowed to stand by the world's poor despite the downturn, unveiling a $15 billion boost for food production. (AP)

G8 leaders, including an Africa-bound Barack Obama, vowed to stand by the world's poor despite the downturn, unveiling a $15 billion boost for food production. (AP)

G8 leaders, including an Africa-bound Barack Obama, vowed to stand by the world's poor despite the downturn, unveiling a 15 billion dollar boost for food production.

The G8 group of rich nations and 19 partner countries agreed to spend at least 15 billion dollars ($A19 billion) to boost agriculture and food security in the developing world.

"There is an urgent need for decisive action to free humankind from hunger and poverty," G8 leaders said in a statement issued on the last day of their summit in Italy, at which they were joined by African heads of state.

The leaders of developed countries also heard calls from Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak to freeze repayments on loans to African countries to help them weather the economic crisis.
  
Mubarak, here as part of an expanded G8 summit, asked the rich countries to "arrange a temporary freeze on African debt" and to extend credit to the continent on preferential rates.
  
He also said they should seek the means to cover the deficit in development finance caused by the economic crisis. 

The plan represented a "shift from food aid -- which is like providing medication after the child is ill -- to providing assistance to help the countries themselves to put in place the right policies to be able to produce food by themselves," said Kanayo Nwanze, head of UN agricultural agency IFAD.
  
US president Barack Obama called on other countries to back the plan at an expanded G8 heads of state breakfast meeting joined by the leaders of Algeria, Angola, Ethiopia, Nigeria and Senegal as well as African Union chairman Moamer Kadhafi.
  
The leaders expressed concern about "the growing scarcity of water resources and by the dramatic lack of sustainable access to water and sanitation in many African countries," which they said was a major impediment to development.
  
In a declaration issued after the breakfast, they agreed to work for water and sanitation improvements at national and international levels.
  
The meeting expanded still further at a 10:30 am session to include  Netherlands, Spain, Turkey, as well as the G5 emerging economies and Egypt, and the heads of the major international organisations, like the UN and World Bank. 

Australia, Indonesia and South Korea were also taking part as members of the Major Economies Forum as the leaders turned their attention to food security.
  
The expanded meeting gave G8 leaders an opportunity to cement ties with leaders from the developing nations.

Obama leaned to his right to speak at some length to Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh before the meeting got under way, Singh listening attentively as he looked straight ahead.
  
Summit chairman Silvio Berlusconi, the Italian prime minister, was flanked by Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika and Turkish President Abdullah Gul, with whom he has maintained close diplomatic ties.
  
Berlusconi was to hold a press conference at 1:00 pm (1100 GMT) at the close of the three-day summit in the Italian mountain town of L'Aquila.
  
Obama and his wife Michelle, a descendant of African slaves, are to leave for Ghana in West Africa later today on the first visit to sub-Saharan Africa by a black US president.
  
Obama is expected to stress the interconnection between Africa and the rest of the world in the 21st century, his aides said.
  
Libyan leader Kadhafi held talks early Friday with British Prime Minister Gordon Brown who told him that richer nations should not renege on their commitments just because times were getting tougher, according to a Downing Street spokesman.
  
"The prime minister made the point that African countries were not responsible for the global recession and we have a responsibility to make sure that they are protected from it," said the spokesman. "This is not a time to retreat from our commitments to the poorest."
  
IFAD head Nwanze told AFP that the US was to contribute 3.5 billion dollars to the agriculture initiative launched by Obama, which is to run over three years.
  
Meanwhile, hundreds of Carabinieri forces deployed along the route of a march by anti-globalisation protesters towards the summit venue.
  
The anti-capitalist marchers will also tap into local frustrations about the slow progress of reconstruction after the April 6 earthquake that devastated the town, with more than 24,000 people still homeless in the area.
  
Earlier, Obama said the world's biggest economies had reached a "historic consensus" on cutting pollution, saying rich nations had a duty to set an example, as world leaders also agreed to shun protectionism.