Showing posts with label Guatemala. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Guatemala. Show all posts

Thursday, 1 December 2011

MALNUTRITION: Guatemala: Chronic Malnutrition Crosses Borders

November/December 2011 : Wende S. DuFlon and Maxine Hillary
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credit: Alfredo Calderón, USAID
A boy helps his father prepare the onion harvest for market in Sololá in the Western Highlands region of Guatemala.

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credit: Wende DuFlon, USAID
A brother and sister by the family adobe oven in a rural highlands village in Quiché, Guatemala, where the USAID/Save the Children food security program is increasing income and improving nutrition. image descr credit: Wende DuFlon, USAID
Felix Mayor, a Kaqchikel Maya leader of a Guatemalan farmers cooperative, holds freshly picked strawberries.

The soil is fertile and the people have been farming it for generations. The climate is right for several growing seasons of corn, wheat, beans, and myriad other crops. Why then does Guatemala have more chronically malnourished children than any other country in the Western Hemisphere, ranking sixth among nations globally for this human development indicator?
Food insecurity is not only a barrier to development in Guatemala—it has direct implications for neighbors in Central America and, ultimately, points north.
Guatemala’s crisis has been the subject of international press in the last couple of years—finally, the world is learning that one out of every two Guatemalan children younger than 5 years old is chronically malnourished. The national data mask an even worse situation among indigenous populations (mostly Maya people) where malnutrition stunts the growth of 65.9 percent of indigenous children ages 3 months to 59 months, compared with only 36.9 percent among non-indigenous children.
In Guatemala, leaders are just beginning to see how this situation holds everyone back, not just the malnourished and the poor who make up 51 percent of the population. Kevin Kelly, USAID/Guatemala mission director, explains: “Public awareness is growing that high levels of chronic malnutrition have far-reaching repercussions, including poverty and crippled economies that result in large numbers of disenfranchised youth migrating or engaging in criminal activities.”
How does this happen? Malnutrition stymies cognitive and physiological growth in the first 1,000 days of life—from a mother’s pregnancy through her child’s second year of life. This irreversible stunting dooms children to repetitive illness, inhibits them intellectually and physically, and ultimately reduces their productivity as adults by roughly a third. For society, this adds up to a dire scenario: Results from a recent UNICEF study show that chronic malnutrition costs Guatemala $8.4 million each day in reduced productivity, hospitalization, student failure, and repetition in the first three years of primary school.

Crisis Cross-Pollination
In an increasingly globalized world, one country’s crisis quickly penetrates the borders of another. “When large numbers of people in a society cannot meet their basic needs, the situation evolves to political instability, social conflict, and violence as Guatemala’s neighbors, trading partners, tourists, and citizens are discovering,” says Casey de Vides, USAID/Guatemala democracy and governance adviser. Since 2008, each year nearly 30,000 Guatemalans who have migrated north to look for work have been deported by the United States, according to Guatemalan Government migration statistics.
The country counts itself an important U.S. trading partner, with ties that stretch back to the early 1800s during the Jefferson era. Speaking before Congress last February, Mark Feierstein, USAID assistant administrator for the Bureau for Latin America and the Caribbean, highlighted the connection: “We help each other not only because it is the right thing to do and is an expression of our [American] values, but because our well-being is linked to that of people throughout this vast and diverse hemisphere.”
While undernutrition is widely recognized in other parts of the world, Guatemala’s crisis went relatively unnoticed until international media began to expose the direct connection between the sharp rise in chronic hunger and malnutrition, the world economic crisis, and global climate change. In the case of Guatemala, this means floods and droughts exacerbated by severe deforestation. The international coverage brought the high prevalence of undernutrition to the attention of Guatemala’s opinion leaders, development organizations, and informed citizens.
But to those most affected, chronic malnutrition is just part of life. Among the rural poor, who are mostly indigenous, mothers and fathers and community leaders will tell you: ’We’ve always eaten frijol and tortillas, and drunk coffee. Babies get sick and mothers die in childbirth—it has always been this way.’
“It’s also been elusive to Guatemalan economic and political leaders who are just beginning to understand how the ’other half’ of our nation—rural, indigenous, and marginal urban populations—lives, and that Mayans [Guatemala’s majority indigenous population] are not genetically short in stature,” reflects Dr. Baudilio López, USAID/Guatemala health officer.
For development leaders, chronic malnutrition is usually considered another ingredient in a statistic stew along with natural disasters, rapid population growth, a faltering economy, increased crime, maternal and infant mortality, urbanization, and poverty.
So how did chronic malnutrition come to be invisible? History holds part of the answer: Guatemala is a post-conflict society that emerged from a 36-year civil war in December 1996—a war that shredded the delicate fabric of an already divided society—and a recent democracy that adopted its current constitution in 1985.
It is the land of the ancient Maya who still wear traditional clothing and speak 22 indigenous languages. When the Spanish conquered the Maya 500 years ago, they retreated to the hills and mountains to avoid the injustices of colonization. In the highlands, they built communities with market and political systems that were insulated from central government and mainstream commerce and social life. They followed their ancestors’ slash-and-burn practices to cultivate beans and corn, and they became migrants working on non-native coffee, banana, and sugar plantations.
Basic services, such as electricity, water and sanitation, health and education, and new technologies like agricultural diversity and cultivation practices did not reach the isolated communities. The civil war further severed relations between the disenfranchised rural indigenous and the urban, largely Ladino (non-indigenous and officially recognized as a distinct ethnic group) landowners and government leaders.
Another part of the equation is that chronic malnutrition was never identified as a root cause of other development challenges.

Feeding for a Stable and Secure Future
The average citizen in the United States spends approximately 10 percent of family income on food while the poorest of the world spend over 50 percent. Improving nutrition in developing countries, and particularly during the critical 1,000-day window beginning with a woman’s pregnancy through her child’s second birthday, has long-lasting positive effects and can help break the cycle of poverty. Strong evidence demonstrates that providing better nutrition within that window could save millions of lives and increase a country’s gross domestic product by at least 2 to 3 percent annually.
Guatemala has 14 eco-regions with climate and soils that produce an abundance of food. However, the basic diet among the rural poor, who are mostly indigenous, is beans (frijol), corn in the form of tortillas or broths, and coffee with little use of fruits, vegetables, or sources of animal-based protein. This derives from a history and culture of subsistence farming using slash and burn techniques. Even communities that produce crops such as carrots, onions, strawberries, or squash prefer to sell the produce rather than consume it. They are often not aware that their produce is any more nutritious than that in their regular diet.

Food security
 credit: Sonia Dominguez, USAID
A farmer from Sololá shows his snow peas fresh from the vine. Snow peas are a non-traditional export that Guatemala began producing with USAID agriculture value chain alliances.

Food security is composed of three elements: Food access is adequate resources to obtain appropriate foods for a nutritious diet, which depends on income available to the household, the distribution of income within the household, and the price of food. Food utilization is proper biological use of food, requiring a diet providing sufficient energy and essential nutrients, potable water, and adequate sanitation as well as household knowledge of food storage and processing, the basic principles of nutrition, and proper management of childcare and illness. Food availability is having sufficient quantities of food available from household production, other domestic output, commercial imports, or food assistance.
Unlike other countries where malnutrition is largely a problem of availability, the malnutrition situation in Guatemala stems from people, particularly women’s lack of access to the money needed to buy nourishing food, and the improper use of food. In the book, Finding the Ties that Bind: Beyond Headship and Household, the Population Council’s Judith Bruce and Cynthia Lloyd explain how in Guatemala, an additional $11.40 per month in a mother’s hands would achieve the same weight gain in a young child as an additional $166 earned by the father.

Growing Opportunity
There are significant opportunities to simultaneously increase the income and nutritional status of rural households and increase the efficiency of poverty-fighting municipal services.
One of the most promising opportunities is Guatemala’s leader status in non-traditional agriculture, horticulture, and coffee exports in Central America. For example, USAID programs have engaged thousands of small-scale coffee growers in the highlands to develop production and marketing skills and participate in a global market niche for high-quality, specialty coffees. Guatemalan coffee production creates 2 million jobs every year for rural families.
Recognizing the opportunities and challenges, in 2010, USAID realigned its resources to focus on reducing malnutrition as the root cause of poverty—which drives people to seek work in other countries or with the growing drug or human-trafficking trades.
The new presidential initiatives, Feed the Future and Global Health, are timely for Guatemala; they facilitated the design of a multi-year, multi-sector strategy for food security and nutrition in support of the Government of Guatemala’s inclusive country-led food security plan.
The USAID strategy focuses on the poor, food-insecure Western Highlands region. It is embraced by a wide-range of Guatemalan stakeholders including national government officials, municipal authorities, private sector leaders, rural poor community leaders and families, civil society organizations, and other international donors, who have not historically sat around the same planning table.
“The goal,” says David Delgado, senior food security adviser for USAID/Guatemala, “is to sustainably reduce poverty and chronic malnutrition in Guatemala by focusing on agriculture, local governance, and nutrition.”
Horticulture and coffee hold the strongest potential for small-scale farmers and cooperatives where lands are managed and worked collectively and the proceeds are shared. Linking health and nutrition education interventions, particularly with mothers and small children, with agriculture value chains, and incorporating the support of municipal leaders is vital for the sustainability of this ambitious development venture.

The Feed the Future Foundation
Based on USAID best practices, this is how it is expected to work: Feed the Future will strengthen municipal governments’ economic development plans to reduce poverty and chronic malnutrition, improve their capacity to deliver basic services, especially water and sanitation, and support community-based advocacy to ensure that food security is sustainable. USAID will continue support to NGOs that advocate for improved health and nutrition, and is working to ensure that local governments are accountable and responsive to the needs of vulnerable groups.
“Our experience shows that increased income for farmers and job creation for day laborers that comes from the production of high-value crops, complemented by better access to basic health services, nutrition education, potable water, and comprehensive hygiene, improves food security and offers rural families a ticket out of poverty,” says Julia María Asturias, USAID/Guatemala food security officer. Targeted environmental and climate change-mitigation activities will further reduce food insecurity.
The strategy aligns USAID resources and integrates programming with other U.S. Government agencies; leverages investments from other donors, the private sector, and the Government of Guatemala; and includes an active monitoring and evaluation component and a diplomatic strategy to advocate for policy changes that increase the likelihood of sustainable poverty reduction in Guatemala.
“In short,” continues David Delgado, “our strategy takes a wide angle-lens view of what causes chronic malnutrition and concentrates our joint efforts on one geographic area, always in partnership with Guatemalan Government and community leaders. It is strategic to build on synergies between the USAID Feed the Future and Global Health Initiatives so that we can offer the rural poor an integrated set of tested solutions. We will commence work with those people who are most affected and most likely to be change agents: women and small-scale farmers.
“We know that raising income to increase access to food and improving nutrition practices are the best ways to attack chronic malnutrition. To improve nutrition practice, behavior change in rural households is needed—from selection and cooking of nutritious foods to food allocation within the family and care giving. Because these are traditionally women’s responsibility, an active and more empowered role of women—wives, mothers, mothers-in-law, and grandmothers—is essential to reduce chronic malnutrition. Women must learn to increase essential vitamins and minerals in the family diet, they must practice immediate and exclusive breastfeeding of newborns and learn complementary feeding of young children as well as the prevention and early detection and treatment of childhood illnesses.”
The change in women’s role and behavior will be sustainable if it is supported by male community leaders and family members. Local governance is an effective way to engage men in behavior change around nutritional choices and the use of scarce financial resources for nutrition during the first 1,000 days during a woman’s pregnancy and her child’s second birthday.

An Uphill Climb
There is far to go before chronic nutrition stops stunting half of Guatemala’s future. But raising public awareness of the problem and making its profound and far-reaching effects visible comes at a strategic time for Guatemala and its neighbors, providing an opportunity for new partners to work in innovative ways toward mutual prosperity, security, and stability.
Felix Mayor, leader of the Utz-Ajticonelá association in Zaragoza, Chimaltenango, reflects on the changes that USAID/Mercy Corps-led agriculture value chains have brought his community: “When our land is healthy, then our people are healthy and can grow up strong like our crops to feed us so that we can work; then we thrive. When we thrive, our youth stay home….
“Now we have a high school so they can work and go to school and stay here with the family. When the technicians first came to offer to help us learn to diversify our crops our land was sick—our strawberries no longer grew as they used to and we suffered—we did not know what to do. The technicians taught us how to take care of our environment, plant new crops, and nourish the soil with rotating these new plants with our strawberries. We learned to recycle our plastic, to build latrines, and to fence in our collective plots.
“Our women now work in the new packing plants. Not only do they have incomes for the first time in our history, they learn hygiene and to use the crops we produce for family meals. We no longer have to sell to the coyotes on the side of the main roads. Now we sell with dignity to buyers who pay us a fair price that we learned how to negotiate. We earn more. So, like the land, with opportunities we can thrive and take better care of our children and our community.”
http://www.usaid.gov/press/frontlines/fl_nov11/FL_nov11_FOOD_GUATEMALA.html

Sunday, 24 July 2011

MALNUTRITION: Guatemala: conditional cash transfer program

Lomi KrielJuly 20, 2011 09:55

Supporters of Guatemalan presidential candidate and former First Lady Sandra Torres, hold banners as they gather at Constitution square in Guatemala City, on July 17, 2011. The banners read "Work for the people" and "Sandra does fulfill!". (Johan Ordonez/AFP/Getty Images)Though for decades, Guatemala has had one of the highest rates of chronic malnutrition in the world – one in every two children are stunted – the issue has barely entered the country’s political discourse. Guatemala is the only Latin American country to have failed to decrease its malnutrition rates even as countries with greater income inequality, such as Brazil, or those who are poorer, like Bolivia, made advances.
During his 2007 campaign, President Alvaro Colom pledged to make malnutrition a priority. In addition to food distribution – giving rice, beans, and nutritional supplements to the poorest of the poor -- the government’s strategy focuses on a conditional cash transfer program called “My Family Progresses.” The government pays poor mothers a stipend in exchange for proof that their children are attending school and regularly receiving health check-ups and other preventative services, including growth monitoring, important for identifying and helping malnourished children.
Wildly popular throughout Latin America and the Caribbean, conditional cash transfer programs have generally been viewed as successful: cutting poverty, reducing income inequality, increasing access to educational and health services and, important for policy makers, doing so relatively cheaply.
In Guatemala, however, the program has been mired in criticism, partly due to a lack of transparency and accountability and partly because of Guatemala’s politics and history of corruption.
Colom placed the program under an inter-institutional body not accountable to Congress and chaired by his wife. An astute politician, Sandra Torres has eyed her husband’s seat for years. Critics charged the initiative was a political tactic to reward Colom’s supporters -- who are overwhelmingly rural and indigenous and helped him barely beat his conservative opponent in 2007 -- as well as shore up support for Torres’ inevitable campaign, which she officially declared in May.
Colom is the first left-of-center candidate to rule Guatemala in more than five decades. After attempts at social reforms, particularly land redistribution, the country’s last leftist government was toppled in a U.S.-led coup, catapulting Guatemala into a 36-year-long civil war.
Colom eventually improved the program’s transparency and accountability, but shoddy oversight hasn’t helped its credibility. An investigation last year by one of Guatemala’s biggest newspapers, El Periodico, found many of the identification documents registered in the program belonged to the same individuals. Health workers call the program “The Bar Progresses,” referring to husbands pocketing stipends for alcohol and other frivolities instead of food as intended.
The program has also been blamed for further weakening the already broke Ministries of Health and Education. Over the past two years, Guatemala’s health budget sunk to 1 percent of the gross domestic product because of the global financial crisis, Guatemala’s low tax collection rates, and its skyrocketing population growth. Transferring millions to fund the conditional cash transfer program only added to the crisis.
Critics say additional kids in a classroom hurt rather than help if the budget doesn’t compensate for the increase. The same goes for an already over-burdened health system where many key medications aren’t arriving, some health workers haven’t been paid in months, and many rural communities see a physician only every 30 days. Guatemalan’s health minister has said it would take three times the budget to fund current health needs.
“The health system is really an anemic system,” said Dr. Baudilio Lopez, a project development specialist at the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID.) “They have almost no resources and the few resources they have aren’t well invested.”
A Mi Familia Progresa spokeswoman didn’t respond to requests for an interview. According to an impact assessment by the Inter-American Development Bank, participating families have higher rates of vaccinations in children younger than two, school enrollment increased by 5 percent, and household consumption increased by up to $8 per adult per month. Its impact on chronic malnutrition remains unknown.
Because of the country’s budget crisis, the future of the program itself also remains unclear. According to figures released last week, it is running short at least $100 million, meaning it could collapse in just two months. Critics said political considerations prevented the program’s dire financial straits from becoming public earlier.
“It’s an irresponsibility of the former first lady, who was running these programs, because for electoral purposes,” the likely collapse wasn’t adequately anticipated, Rosa Maria de Frade, a congresswoman and president of the Legislative Transparency Commissio, told the Guatemalan newspaper Siglo Veintiuno.
Guatemala’s presidential elections are set for September, and Otto Perez Molina, a former head of military intelligence who barely lost to Colom in 2007, is all but assured victory.. In recent polls, his closest opponent was Torres who trailed behind by about 30 percentage points. In late June, electoral officials denied Torres eligibility based on a constitutional clause restricting relatives of the president from running.
Perez Molina, who represents a conservative right-wing party, has said he would continue Mi Familia Progresa, and has vowed it would receive better oversight. What remains to be seen is if a Perez Molina government has the will and capacity to succeed at tax reform, crucial to properly funding the conditional cash transfer program and the education and health ministries on which it relies.
<http://www.globalpost.com/dispatches/globalpost-blogs/global-pulse/my-family-progresses>

Tuesday, 31 May 2011

POVERTY: Rising food prices increase squeeze on poor

31 May 2011
Wheat grains 
The price of key crops could rise by up to 180%, Oxfam says Continue reading the main story

Rising food prices are tightening the squeeze on populations already struggling to buy adequate food, demanding radical reform of the global food system, Oxfam has warned.
By 2030, the average cost of key crops could increase by between 120% and 180%, the charity forecasts.
It is the acceleration of a trend which has already seen food prices double in the last 20 years.
Half of the rise to come will be caused by climate change, Oxfam predicts.
It calls on world leaders to improve regulation of food markets and invest in a global climate fund.
"The food system must be overhauled if we are to overcome the increasingly pressing challenges of climate change, spiralling food prices and the scarcity of land, water and energy," said Barbara Stocking, Oxfam's chief executive.

Women and children
World food prices have already more than doubled since 1990, according to Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) figures, and Oxfam predicts that this trend will accelerate over the next 20 years.
In its report, Growing a Better Future, Oxfam says predictions suggest the world's population will reach 9bn by 2050 but the average growth rate in agricultural yields has almost halved since 1990.
According to the charity's research, the world's poorest people now spend up to 80% of their incomes on food - with those in the Philippines spending proportionately four times more than those in the UK, for instance - and more people will be pushed into hunger as food prices climb.
Chart

The report highlights four "food insecurity hotspots", areas which are already struggling to feed their citizens:
Guatemala, where 865,000 people are said to be at risk of food insecurity because of a lack of state investment in smallholder farmers who are highly dependent on imported food
India, where people spend more than twice the proportion of their income on food than UK residents
Azerbaijan, where wheat production fell 33% last year because of poor weather, forcing the country to import grains from Russia and Kazakhstan; food prices were 20% higher in December 2010 than the same month in 2009
East Africa, where eight million people currently face chronic food shortages because of drought, with women and children among the hardest hit
Among the many factors continuing to drive rising food prices in the coming decades, Oxfam predicts that climate change will have the most serious impact.
Ahead of the UN climate summit in South Africa in December, it calls on world leaders to launch a global climate fund, "so that people can protect themselves from the impacts of climate change and are better equipped to grow the food they need".
The World Bank has also warned that rising food prices are pushing millions of people into extreme poverty.
In April, it said food prices were 36% above levels of a year ago, driven by problems in the Middle East and North Africa.

'Minority profiting'
In its report, Oxfam says a "broken" food system causes "hunger, along with obesity, obscene waste, and appalling environmental degradation".
It says "power above all determines who eats and who does not", and says the present system was "constructed by and on behalf of a tiny minority - its primary purpose to deliver profit for them".
It highlights subsidies for big agricultural producers, powerful investors "playing commodities markets like casinos", and large unaccountable agribusiness companies as destructive forces in the global food system.

Oxfam wants nations to agree new rules to govern food markets, to ensure the poor do not go hungry.
It said world leaders must:
increase transparency in commodities markets and regulate futures markets
scale up food reserves
end policies promoting biofuels
nvest in smallholder farmers, especially women

"We are sleepwalking towards an avoidable age of crisis," said Ms Stocking. "One in seven people on the planet go hungry every day despite the fact that the world is capable of feeding everyone."

'Market works'
However, the report's emphasis on the importance of small farmers was challenged by Nicola Horlick, a leading British investment fund manager who has invested in farmland in Brazil, in a debate with Ms Stocking on the BBC's Today programme.
She said large mechanised farms still provided some job opportunities for local workers and created spin-off industries.
"You cannot reply on a whole lot of smallholders to feed the world - it's not going to work," she said.
"It is really important in my view that we have more investment going into farmland. There are huge tracts of farmland... that aren't being farmed."
She said the market worked because shortages increased potential profits from investing in food, which would in time being supply and demand back into balance.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-13597657

Tuesday, 10 May 2011

MALNUTRITION: Experts say 53.5 mln suffer from hunger in L. America, Caribbean


Editor: Xiong Tong : 2011-05-06

LIMA, May 5 (Xinhua) -- A total of 53.5 million people in Latin America and the Caribbean suffer from hunger or malnutrition, experts said at an international forum here Thursday.
Juan Garcia, coordinator of the 5th work-group meeting of the Latin American and Caribbean Initiative Without Hunger, said the figure has not increased since 1990.
Experts and officials from 13 countries gathered to discuss the challenges facing regional food security and advances that have been made, hoping to make cooperative efforts to eradicate hunger and malnutrition by the year 2025.
Garcia said people affected most across the continent are still those living in rural areas as well as African descendants and indigenous people who suffer from "exclusion and inequality."
The main cause of undernutrition is not lack of food-production capacity, but access to food, Garcia said.
Six countries, Brazil, Ecuador, Venezuela, Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua, have approved food security laws with nine more in the process of doing so. The laws are considered as a way to ensure that local agricultural products are primarily used to feed the countries' own populations and not used for export.
http://news.xinhuanet.com/english2010/health/2011-05/06/c_13861779.htm

Monday, 9 May 2011

POVERTY: Central America: Boosting Small Enterprise to Fight Poverty


Danilo Valladares : May 06, 2011

Small and medium-sized companies in Central America are the targets of foreign development aid programmes aimed at fighting the region's high poverty levels.
One of the initiatives is the Access Programme for Rural Associations of Micro-, Small and Medium-sized Enterprises in Central America, implemented by the Guatemalan Exporters Association (AGEXPORT) and financed by the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), a specialised United Nations agency.
'We are mainly seeking to generate employment, and through that, to secure access to food and nutrition security and improve people's quality of life,' the programme's director, Iván Buitrón, told IPS.
The initiative, which got underway in March at a total cost of three million dollars, will provide training to more than 80,000 rural entrepreneurs in Honduras, El Salvador, Nicaragua and Guatemala over the next three years.
When asked about the programme's aims in the region, Buitrón said, 'One is to strengthen capacities in business, administration, accounting, costs, sales and delivery.'
Other goals are 'to support organisational development in production and productivity, and ensure that products reach the standards of quality and volume demanded by the markets and follow traceability requirements.'
Another focus, the AGEXPORT official said, is disseminating 'knowledge, to facilitate access to international fairs to learn about successful initiatives and the importance of meeting safety standards and green production standards.'
Working together is fundamental to helping small and medium enterprises (SMEs) take off. 'It's essential for the state to invest in infrastructure and in stocking up for production, for the private sector to contribute to the technical aspects of market intelligence, and for both to complement each other in public-private alliances,' he added.
The programme thus seeks to reduce poverty by boosting incomes in Honduras, El Salvador, Nicaragua and Guatemala, which are classified by the World Bank as four of the world's 56 lower middle income countries - between 976 and 3,855 dollars in GNI per capita.
For example, 47 percent of Nicaragua's 5.7 million people live on two dollars a day or less, according to the country's National Development Information Institute, as do half of Guatemala's 14 million people, according to United Nations figures.
Despite the high poverty levels, Central America has potential. 'There are many opportunities, and there is demand for products from this region, but what are lacking are policies of support and incentives for speeding up access to markets,' Buitrón said.
The needs of SMEs are clear. 'We have a problem with intermediaries, because they set the prices, and since demand is low, we have to accept them, even if we end up actually losing money in the end,' Alberto Ortiz, a craftsman from the village of Samayac in the southern Guatemalan province of Suchitepéquez, told IPS.
Ortiz, who makes leather belts and bags, finds it hard to overcome the barriers standing in the way of selling his products. 'We have tried to set up an association, but we've had problems, and the government institutions haven't given us a hand,' he complained.
He has no doubt that the IFAD-financed training programme will be a great opportunity for developing small businesses, 'principally for selling our products,' he said.
Lina Martínez, manager of the Garifuna-owned company Wabagari Distribution that makes cassava-based ethnic products in Honduras, under the Casabe O'Big Mama brand name, told IPS that SMEs 'lack the capital and productive and technological capacity to generate volume.'
Martínez, whose company makes 'casabe', an unleavened flatbread made from cassava flour, says 'soft credits' are needed to meet these needs. 'It's important to focus on products with better packaging, and to provide loans with soft interest rates. That would be an excellent alternative,' she said.
Her company sells its products to Wal-Mart, through the U.S. hypermarket chain's 'Una Mano para Crecer' (A Hand to Grow) supplier development programme.
But there are risks when it comes to how aid to SMEs is implemented.
'The support has to have flexibility that provides maneuvering room to allow businesses to respond in a proactive manner to the real situation they encounter,' Yasmin Martínez, with the Chamber of Commerce and Industry of El Salvador, told IPS.
'But these programmes sometimes come with so many limitations that the money ends up in the hands of consultants who tried, but were unable,' to help get SMEs off the ground, she said.
Yasmin Martínez believes the gap in technology and training and a lack of innovation are the main problems faced by SMEs in El Salvador, not to mention organised crime, which through extortion 'suffocates our businesses,' she added.
SMEs are vital to the economy in El Salvador and the rest of the countries in the region.
In El Salvador, 99.6 percent of all businesses are SMEs, which number more than 174,000 in total and account for 65.5 percent of all jobs, generating nearly 488,000 direct jobs, according to the Chamber of Commerce and Industry.
Ingrid Figueroa with the Central American Integration System's (SICA) Centre for the Promotion of Micro and Small Enterprise in Central America told IPS that fomenting small-scale business initiatives, improving access to financing, and strengthening financial education are major challenges that must be addressed in the region.
http://www.globalissues.org/news/2011/05/06/9544

Tuesday, 3 May 2011

MALNUTRITION: Guatemala: Child malnutrition caused by more than lack of food

Susan Martin : American Academy of Pediatrics
DENVER –- Giving poor families land on which to grow crops has been shown to improve child nutrition. New research also shows that giving families non-agricultural land and better housing also is beneficial for children's growth and nutrition. Study shows living conditions, sanitation and community organization play role in child growth

Results of the study of child malnutrition in rural Guatemala will be presented Sunday, May 1, at the Pediatric Academic Societies (PAS) annual meeting in Denver.
Guatemala's rural populations suffer from one of the most unequal land distributions in Latin America. About 2 percent of the population owns 70 percent of all productive farmland. To remedy this, non-governmental organizations (NGOs) have raised money to buy private land and donate it to poor farmers so they can grow crops. However, urbanization and lack of land have led NGOs to distribute land for housing instead of farming.
Asya Agulnik, MD, MPH, and her colleagues looked at the effects of this change in land distribution on child health in coffee-growing areas of Guatemala. Researchers compared child malnutrition rates in five villages, four of which received non-agricultural land and brick houses in organized communities, along with improved sanitation. Families in the fifth community continued to live in squatter settlements on plantations.
Using WHO growth curves, investigators compared weight-for-age measurements of 242 children in these communities before and after the land distribution.
Before the moves, about 37 percent of children younger than 38 months were moderately malnourished, while just over 7 percent were severely malnourished. Twenty months after families received land and houses, malnutrition rates dropped among children in the same age group; roughly 19 percent were diagnosed with moderate malnutrition, and 5 percent were severely malnourished. Older children who were not breastfeeding at the time their family received land allotments and housing experienced the greatest nutritional benefit.
Meanwhile, children who remained in squatter settlements experienced worsening malnutrition.

"Malnutrition is a major problem for the health of children under 5 years of age in rural Mayan Guatemalan villages," said Dr. Agulnik, lead author of the study and a resident at Children's Hospital Boston. "This study demonstrates that in areas where land scarcity is a major problem, land distributions supporting improved housing and community organization can improve child nutrition without changing a family's income. It also suggests that in our population, living conditions, sanitation, crowding and community organization play a major role in causing child malnutrition."
The study underscores the fact that childhood malnutrition is not only about food, said study co-author Paul Wise, MD, MPH, FAAP, who created a program at Stanford University in California called Children in Crisis to improve health care to children living in politically unstable regions. "While this study documents the terrible toll of poverty on child health, it also emphasizes the interaction between the child, infections, community life and the exercise of political power."


The Pediatric Academic Societies (PAS) are four individual pediatric organizations who co-sponsor the PAS Annual Meeting – the American Pediatric Society, the Society for Pediatric Research, the Academic Pediatric Association, and the American Academy of Pediatrics. Members of these organizations are pediatricians and other health care providers who are practicing in the research, academic and clinical arenas. The four sponsoring organizations are leaders in the advancement of pediatric research and child advocacy within pediatrics, and all share a common mission of fostering the health and well being of children worldwide. For more information, visit www.pas-meeting.org. Follow news of the PAS meeting on Twitter at http://twitter.com/PedAcadSoc.
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2011-05/aaop-cmc042711.php

Sunday, 24 April 2011

MALNUTRITION: Guatemala: Extreme Weather Triggers Hunger Alert

April 20, 2011
The Guatemalan government on Tuesday declared a nationwide "nutritional risk alert" to avoid a food crisis in the country's poorest areas where thousands of people don't have enough food to survive.
Press secretary Ronaldo Robles told reporters that the measure was taken by President Alvaro Colom and his Cabinet to facilitate the implementation of a contingency plan designed by the National Council for Food and Nutritional Security, or Conasan.

"This is a nutritional risk alert, not an emergency. What is being sought with this measure is, precisely, to prevent the emergency," Robles said.
To implement the plan, which includes the distribution of food to at-risk families, the government needs 324 million quetzales ($40.5 million), of which it only has 46 million quetzales ($5.8 million).
"Financial resources will have to be sought from different sources, but the important thing is obtaining them by means of a tax reform," Robles said.
In addition to the distribution of food, the plan sets forth mechanisms to monitor the results obtained in its initial phases, as well as the stockpiling of reserves to prevent the development of a full-blown food emergency.
Extreme effects caused by climate change ranging from prolonged droughts to heavy rains have damaged the harvests of millions of poor farmers in the country's interior.
The so-called "dry corridor," which spans nine provinces, along with the southern coastal communities affected by the rains, are the areas that have been most affected.
Conasan says that some 5,000 children suffer from acute malnutrition nationwide and another 10,000 are "at risk" due to their lack of minimum nutrients.
A study by the national ombud's office released last week said that up until March at least 808,137 cases of chronic malnutrition had been tallied on the national level.
Action Against Hunger, an international NGO, said that in the dry-corridor provinces of Jalapa and Chiquimula the lack of food forced poor families to reduce the average amount of food a person consumes each day by 40 percent from 1.23 pounds to 0.75 pounds.
http://latino.foxnews.com/latino/news/2011/04/20/extreme-weather-triggers-hunger-alert-guatemala/

Monday, 18 April 2011

MALNUTRITION: Guatemala: Malnutrition, Violence, and Investment

April 14, 2011



Several recent reports do not put Guatemala in a positive light. First, the European Union published a study that found that Guatemala has the highest rate of child malnutrition in all of Latin America. Almost 50% of children under the age of 5 suffer from chronic malnutrition. The EU's Rafael Señán Llarena added that Guatemala's malnutrition rate is higher than that of Haiti and among the five worst in the world.
Second, the Mutual Support Group (GAM) voiced its preoccupation with the continued violence in the country. During the first three months of the year, there were a total of 1,240 victims of violence, including 116 women and 3 girls. 874 of the victims were killed while the remaining 366 were "only" injured.
On the positive side, this number is a decrease from the 909 deaths reported during the first three months of 2010. However, on the negative side, both February (295) and March (304) murders increased after a "calm" January (275). GAM is also worried about the increase in massacres and the number of lynchings.
These numbers include some of the 22 police officers who have died so far this year (some off duty). At least 60 officers were killed last year.
Finally, Guatemala fell eight places (86th to 94th) in the World Economic Forum's Global Information Technology Report's rankings. 138 countries were in the survey.
According to the report, the country is at a disadvantage in terms of the number of days to enforce a contract, the perception of the effectiveness of the laws, the preparation of ICT staff, the quality of education in mathematics and science as well as the quality of the educational system in general.
[The country] also received low scores on the issue of the importance of these technologies in the vision of the Government, intellectual property rights, the acquisition of technologies, production of computers as a percentage of imports and the number of procedures to open a joint-stock company.
One last thing - Rigoberta Menchu's Winaq Political Movement officially became the 27th political party certified by the Supreme Electoral Tribunal (TSE) for this year's election. I thought that this had already occurred, but I guess not. Menchu sees Winaq's successful formation as a poltical party as an achievement for the indigenous people of Guatemala and all the Americas.
http://centralamericanpolitics.blogspot.com/2011/04/malnutrition-violence-and-investment.html

Monday, 11 April 2011

POVERTY: The World Bank is recommending a major difference in the way aid is spent.

April 11, 2011:  David Loyn : BBC international development correspondent


Soldier patrols beach in Guatemala


Poverty rates are 20% higher in countries hit by violence, so aid should target violence, the Bank says Food prices at 'dangerous levels'
The World Bank is recommending a major difference in the way aid is spent.
A quarter of the world's population live in states affected by conflict.
In a report released on Monday, the World Bank says that there should be far more focus on building stable government, and on justice and police, than on health and education.
The report says if there is not a major refocusing of aid in this direction, then other targets on poverty, health and education will not be reached.
There is far more spent on alleviating the effects of conflict than preventing it from breaking out, and conflicts tend to be repeated.
Ninety percent of recent civil wars occurred in countries that had already had a civil war in the last 30 years.
The report found that cycles of violence were hard to stop, for example in South Africa and Central America.
In Guatemala, twice as many people are dying now at the hands of criminals than died in the civil war in the 1980s.
Poverty rates are 20 percentage points higher in countries affected by violence, but up to now, the World Bank found, there had been too little focus on ending corruption or reforming state institutions and justice systems. For instance, reform of justice was not one of the Millennium Development Goals.

Police, not hospitals
The report's author Sarah Cliffe says this is the greatest development challenge facing the world.
"It's much easier for countries to get help with their militaries than it is with their police forces or justice systems, and much easier for them to get help with growth, health or education than it is with employment," she says.
"Our analysis would indicate that that should change."

A lot of this thinking is not new.
Britain is already refocusing its aid towards conflict states.
If other countries do the same it would mark a fundamental shift, where spending money on good police becomes a higher priority than good hospitals or schools
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-13032938

Tuesday, 5 April 2011

MALNUTRITION: Guatemala: Hormel Foods Develops Innovative Protein Product to Address Childhood Malnutrition

March 31, 2011

AUSTIN, Minn.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Hormel Foods Corporation, one of the nation’s largest manufacturers and marketers of consumer-branded meat and food products, has introduced Spammy™, a fortified, shelf-stable turkey spread to help address childhood malnutrition throughout the world.
“Through our partnership with Hormel Foods, we are able to provide much-needed protein to the women and children of Guatemala, and we are already seeing progress”
"Hormel Foods sought to create a product high in protein to help serve malnourished and poverty-stricken communities worldwide," said Jeffrey M. Ettinger, chairman of the board, president and chief executive officer at Hormel Foods. “Our company has years of experience in creating shelf-stable proteins, so we employed our expertise to create this new product.”
Spammy™ is a shelf-stable turkey spread that has been fortified with zinc, iron, B vitamins, and other essential vitamins and minerals.
Hormel Foods has made an initial three-year commitment to deliver 1 million cans of Spammy™ to in-need families in Guatemala through partners Food For The Poor and Caritas Arquidiocesana in 2011. Guatemala was selected because its poverty rate is more than 50 percent and the chronic malnutrition rate is the highest in the Western hemisphere.
Food For The Poor is a relief and development organization that raises funds and provides direct relief assistance to the poor in Latin America and the Caribbean, and Caritas Arquidiocesana is a charity committed to combating poverty.
“Through our partnership with Hormel Foods, we are able to provide much-needed protein to the women and children of Guatemala, and we are already seeing progress,” said Robin Mahfood, president and chief executive officer for Food For The Poor. “The children who eat Spammy™ are more active, their grades are improving, and overall, they are happier and healthier.”
Hormel Foods has been distributing Spammy™ in Guatemala for about 18 months to family centers and orphanages. In addition, Hormel Foods worked with Food For The Poor and donated more than 100,000 cans of Spammy™ to Haiti after the earthquake in January 2010.
Silgan Containers and Smyth Companies, two long-time suppliers of Hormel Foods, are supporting the cause by donating all of the cans and labels for Spammy™.
Hormel Foods and Food For The Poor created a website to allow individuals to contribute to the Spammy™ program. All donations through the website will go directly and fully to Food For The Poor to purchase Spammy™ fortified turkey spread at cost from Hormel Foods. The product then will be shipped by Food For The Poor to Guatemala and distributed at the orphanages, day care centers, nutritional centers and family centers within the Caritas Arquidiocesana network.

About Food For The Poor
Food For The Poor, the third-largest international relief and development organization in the nation, does much more than feed millions of hungry poor in 17 countries of the Caribbean and Latin America. This interdenominational Christian agency provides emergency relief assistance, clean water, medicines, educational materials, homes, support for orphans and the aged, skills training and micro-enterprise development assistance, with more than 96 percent of all donations going directly to programs that help the poor.

About Caritas Arquidiocesana
Caritas Arquidiocesana serves the poor, the sick, and the abandoned in Guatemala.
http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20110331005062/en/Hormel-Foods-Develops-Innovative-Protein-Product-Address

Monday, 21 February 2011

MALNUTRITION: Malnutrition Plagues Guatemala's Children

BY TALEA MILLER: Feb. 16, 2011 Guatemala has the highest rate of chronic malnutrition among children in Latin America, and the health consequences continue on through adulthood.

Children ages 3 and 4 in Guatemala; Photo by Talea Miller
Children ages 3 and 4 in Guatemala; Photo by Talea Miller


Kayla is months away from her fifth birthday and weighs just 18 pounds, about half what a girl her age should by World Health Organization standards.
She suffers from chronic malnutrition and can barely move. Even breathing appears difficult. During a recent visit to Hospitalito Atitlan in rural Guatemala, she was cradled in her mother's arms and whisked from examination room to examination room.
 Kayla's brain development is not progressing, her physical development is stunted,and she can't do simple tasks for herself, said her physical therapist Andrea Maria Sojuel.
Sojuel works for a small non-profit called ADISA, serving disabled patients in the indigenous community of Santiago Atitlan. She sees quite a few children with the same condition. Another patient of hers, a 20-month-old, weighs just eight pounds.

Kayla with her mother at Hospitalito Atitlan.

Kayla with her mother at Hospitalito Atitlan.
About 49 percent of children in Guatemala are chronically malnourished according to the World Food Program—the fourth highest ratein the world. In indigenous communities the rate is closer to 70 percent.
While most won't manifest symptoms as grave as Kayla's, they will all suffer health consequences because of the condition. Chronic malnutrition causes stunted growth, the most obvious and widespread indicator in Guatemala, but also increases the chances of children developing heart disease, diabetes and kidney damage down the line. It can cause anemia as well, greatly increasing the risk of a woman dying in child birth.
Infections that cause diarrhea play a big roll in malnutrition of infants, but for many families the root problem comes down to numbers—too many mouths to feed, not enough food.
"Sometimes it's a question of too many children. The boys will sometimes preferentially get food over the girls, I have seen that," said Mark Lepore, a visiting physician working at the hospital.
Asuncion Don Diego, from Alotenango, near Antigua, knows just how difficult these choices can be. She and her husband have seven children. He plants corn for a living, she took a job washing clothes to help pay for food.
"We would at least try to have tortillas, even if that is all we could feed them," she said through an interpreter.
Jose Andres Botran , who helped create an office in the Guatemalan government specifically to address the problem of food security, said a lack of education on what foods are important for children is part of the problem.
"A person can have 12 tortillas and a Coke and will not be hungry but they won't be well nourished," he said.
Awareness about malnutrition has grown, but necessary monitoring has not been put in place to see if the situation is improving, Botran said. The food security office has helped connect stake holders and runs initiatives to provide fortified foods and educate the population.
USAID also contributes between $16 to $18 million a year in food assistance to the country, including some higher protein commodities like beans and grains fortified with soy.
Still, says Chessa Lutter, regional advisor for the Pan American Health Organization, Guatemala continues to have some of the poorest nutrition indicators in the region and once a child has been malnourished through crucial early development, it has long-lasting implications.
PAHO reports that Guatemala has the highest rates of obesity among poor countries in Latin America, linked to malnutrition. Once a person is stunted and below-average height, it is much easier for them to become overweight.
"The same type of diet, that is heavy in carbs and cheap fats, which makes kids short and anemic also makes adults fat," Lutter said.
For Kayla, the road ahead holds more immediate concerns. She has sores in her throat that make her not want to eat, and she is actually losing weight instead of gaining. It's hard to imagine that she will ever be able to attend school.
"What I worry about most [with these children] is education, the ability to learn" said Lepore, her doctor.
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/updates/latin_america/jan-june11/nutrition_02-16.html

Monday, 7 February 2011

POVERTY: Poverty in Guatemala

February 5, 2011

The Guatemala Times recently summarized 2010 poverty data from the country.

Poverty in Guatemala increased from 51% to 54.1% -55%, according to the latest data published by the Central American Business Intelligence, CABI. CABI informed that poverty, infant and maternal mortality have increased in Guatemala due to the global economic crisis between 2009 and 2010. This has severely affected local efforts to achieve the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).
In their study, CABI reported that the fall in economic growth in Guatemala caused the poverty level to rise from 51 percent to 54.1 percent and in some cases to 55 percent. Among the causes that increased poverty, the agency cited the loss of formal jobs, reduction in real wages (inflation) and bankruptcy of small businesses.
The agency stressed that the annual cost to address maternal and child mortality in Guatemala is not high, it takes only 0.25 percent of gross domestic product (GDP). If the investment in health is reduced it will adversely affect progress recorded in the field. The decrease of remittances of 9.3% in 2009 (Bank of Guatemala) had a very negative impact in the fight against poverty in Guatemala, in addition, despite the boost from programs like Social Cohesion, which distributes 300 Quetzals, (approximately US $ 38.4 depending on the exchange rate) per family, poverty has risen since 2007.
While the decline in remittances was one of the causes for the recent increase in poverty figures, there is some grounds for optimism given that Guatemala recorded a 15.1% increase in January 2011 remittances compared to January 2010.
The Bank of Guatemala revealed yesterday that January 2011 showed revenues of $ 283.3 million. Although this amount is higher than January 2010, when revenues where at U.S. $ 246.1 million, it has not yet reached the levels of 2009, revenues of US $ 290.2 million, or U.S. $ 314.6 million of January 2008.
While not as strong as 2009, it is a step in the right direction. Unfortunately, it's nowhere near the MDG's 2015 goal of 31.4% and really only returns the country to its 2006 poverty level.
http://centralamericanpolitics.blogspot.com/2011/02/poverty-in-guatemala.html

Monday, 10 January 2011

POVERTY: Guatemala: More than 2,000 Guatemalan kids died of hunger last year

January 07, 2011 Guatemala City – More than 2,000 children under 5 died in Guatemala during the first 10 months of 2010 as a consequence of illnesses caused by malnutrition, according to a report presented Friday by the national ombud's office.
The report is based on statistics of the Epidemiology Center of the Public Health Ministry covering the period from Jan. 1-Oct. 31, 2010.
"It's worrying that mortality from hunger is double that of deaths from violence. Thousands of children are estimated to be at risk and there is no sufficient effort being made to save them from this grave situation," ombud Sergio Morales told the media.
Eighty-four percent of the youngsters died at home, without any kind of medical care, according to the report.
Most of the children died of respiratory infections and diarrhea, ailments caused by high levels of malnutrition.
Ministry figures show that one in every two Guatemalan children under 5 suffer from malnutrition, as a consequence of the poverty and extreme poverty in which more than 52 percent of the country's 14.4 million inhabitants live.
Most of the children who died were concentrated in provinces that make up Guatemala's "dry corridor," a strip that runs through the country from east to northeast, which during the last two years has suffered intense droughts blamed on climate change.
http://latino.foxnews.com/latino/lifestyle/2011/01/07/guatemalan-kids-died-hunger-year/

Monday, 28 June 2010

POVERTY: Microcredit in Guatemala

GUATEMALA CITY, Jun 21, 2010 (IPS) - Rosenda Gómez, a 53-year-old mother of five, knows all about challenges. To overcome them, she started a modest sausage business in Guatemala, and thanks to her leadership skills and training and other support she received, she is now an example of the economic empowerment of women.Sixteen years ago she began to make homemade sausages in her village, Laguna Ocubilá, to sell in the nearby city of Huehuetenango, the capital of the northwestern province of the same name. But her business was a micro-enterprise that allowed her family to just barely scrape by -- until things changed radically three years ago, when the Centros de Servicios para los Emprendimientos de las Mujeres (CSEM) came to her village. CSEM, a network of centres providing technical and financial services for women entrepreneurs, is sponsored by the United Nations Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM) in association with Guatemalan institutions. "We began to receive support, in the form of credit, training to improve our products, and promotion of our chicken and pork sausages in markets and fairs -- none of which we had before," Gómez told IPS. With that boost, Gómez, who only went to school up to third grade, managed to increase production from five to 50 kgs of sausages a week, and demand continues to grow. She also received support to set up a meat processing centre, along with other women backed by the CSEM, which changed the life of her family and her business. Her three youngest children, between the ages of 13 and 15, still live with Gómez and her husband, a truck driver, while the other two have already given them seven grandchildren, she says proudly. Her achievement is even more impressive given the limited economic independence of women in this impoverished Central American country. Men represent 65 percent of the economically active population, and women only 35 percent, according to the government's national survey on employment and income. Social organisations point to the vicious circle of poverty, lack of education and lack of health care suffered by so many in this country of 14.3 million people, where the poverty rate is slightly higher for women (51.5 percent) than for men (48.4 percent), according to the 2006 national survey on living conditions. The CSEM is now supporting 3,273 women in seven services centres that began to be established in 2006 in the country's poorest provinces. Seven others operate in El Salvador, Honduras and Nicaragua. "We learned how to draw up a business plan, market our products and estimate production costs," Sonia Paz, the head of the Asociación de Mujeres Olopenses women's association in the eastern province of Chiquimula, where one of the CSEM centres operates, told IPS. Paz forms part of a group of 36 women who make and sell handicrafts like bags and keychains using fibre from the maguey, or agave, plant. "Thanks to support from the CSEM, we have improved the quality of our products and we have registered with the tax office," said Paz. Rita Cassisi, UNIFEM coordinator in Guatemala, told IPS that the CSEM helps women set up businesses by offering loans, organisational training, assistance in improving products, marketing techniques and other support. "One of the vacuums that we have seen is women's access to financing, which is why the programme is focused on a strategy of economic empowerment at the local, national and regional levels," she explained. At the local level, the CSEM centres work with economic development agencies and public and private lending institutions; at the national level they work with universities, the Economy Ministry, the Presidential Secretariat of Women, and women's groups; and in Central America as a region they work with organisations and agencies that support women. According to Cassisi, the CSEM's beneficiaries "are at the base of the business pyramid; they are women who set up micro-enterprises and micro-businesses, which help move the economy." Like any effort, the CSEM has run into hurdles. Gilda Rivera, head of the CSEM in the western province of San Marcos, told IPS a that although they opened their doors in April 2009, things are moving slowly. "The problem is that we don't have funds to invest, and we have around 80 women waiting for our support," she said. In Rivera's view, too many requisites are set for approval of projects in some cases, which slows down the process, while many women are waiting for training and loans in order to upgrade their businesses and increase production. According to the third regional report on the labour market in Central America and the Dominican Republic produced by the International Labour Organisation (ILO) and the Central American Integration System (SICA), 73 percent of women in the labour force in Guatemala work in the informal economy. Iris Alvarado at the non-governmental Centro de Investigación, Capacitación y Apoyo a la Mujer (CICAM - Centre for Women's Research, Training and Support), told IPS that Guatemala faces serious challenges in terms of gender equity, above and beyond women's economic independence. The country's high levels of gender violence and limited access to education and health, especially in rural areas, must be addressed in the attempt to combat gender inequalities and to provide equal opportunities and living conditions for girls and women, Alvarado said.
http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=51893

Sunday, 9 May 2010

MALNUTRITION: Guatemala

In the southern highlands of Guatemala people are hungry. Recent prolonged droughts and a drop in remittances due to the worldwide financial crisis have left many families unable to grown or buy food. Guatemala, which has one of the world's worst rates of chronic malnutrition for children under five (an estimated 47%), is facing a worsening food crisis.
To combat this problem, MADRE and Muixil have expanded Farming for the Future, a food security and microenterprise project for Indigenous Ixil women in El Quiché. With MADRE support, 135 women have received chickens as part of a new pilot project. The project improves community members' nutrition, and establishes a sustainable source of income as meat is sold in local and national markets.
One of the early signs of success of this project is the overwhelming level of interest it has generated throughout local communities. Many residents have asked to become members of Muixil in order to take part. MADRE and Muixil hope to expand the Farming for the Future program to 350 women this year, supporting a total of 2,450 people.

http://www.reliefweb.int/rw/rwb.nsf/db900SID/VDUX-857R4L?OpenDocument

Thursday, 8 April 2010

Guatemala, rising need

Guatemala's rising need has put enormous strain on WFP's food stocks in the country, which have fallen to their lowest level in years. No food distributions have taken place since the end of January 2010. The situation in the extended 'dry corridor' is getting worse.
In order to survive until the September harvest, the Ramos family and thousands of others like them are in dire need of additional assistance.
The World Food Programme is appealing to the international community for a contribution of US$14 million for life-saving operations to provide food assistance to 47,000 families for a six month period.

http://www.reliefweb.int/rw/rwb.nsf/db900SID/ASAZ-84BFWB?OpenDocument