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Egypt Report
Nearly a third of children
malnourished – MoH, UNDP
Despite a number of positive
economic indicators, Egypt has
a hunger problem: Nearly a
third of all children are
malnourished, according to a
new report compiled by the
Ministry of Health and the UN
Development Programme
(UNDP).

The Egyptian Demographic
Health Survey (EDHS) 2008,
<http://www.measuredhs.com/
pubs/pdf/FR220/FR220.pdf>
published in March 2009,
recorded a 6% increase in undernourishment
severe enough to
stunt growth in children under
five, pushing the percentage of
stunted Egyptian toddlers to 29%
from 23% in 2000.
The survey collected data in
2007/2008, when gross
domestic product (GDP) grew
by 7.2, indicating that strong
economic growth had not
benefited ordinary Egyptians.
A slower GDP growth of 4.7%
is forecast for 2008/2009.
“Within the recent context
of economic crises and
economic slowdown, in addition
to the growing epidemics
of avian and H1N1 influenza,
nutrition is not treated as a
priority,” said Hala Abu
Khatwa, head of communications
in Egypt for the UN
Children’s Fund (UNICEF).

Government-run food programmes are in place: In
partnership with the World
Food Programme (WFP), fortified
date bars have been
distributed in high-risk schools
since 1963; and governmentsubsidised
flour and cooking oil
- used to make ‘baladi’ bread –
are fortified with iron/folic acid
and Vitamins A and D.
Chicken cull
Yet some government policies
have adversely affected the
nutrition of the poorest.
UNICEF and WFP said the
EDHS report of a spike in
malnourished children was
partly attributable to the
government’s decision to cull
millions of chickens in 2007.
“The culling had a significant
and substantial impact on
household consumption of
poultry and eggs, especially
[on] young children, and also
put considerable strain on
household resources since
poultry sales accounted for
nearly half of the incomes of
many Egyptian households,”
said UNICEF’s Abu-Khatwa
citing a 2007 study by the Food
and Agriculture Organization
(FAO) entitled Livelihood
Impact Assessment in Egypt.
<http://www.fao.org/docs/eims/
upload//239037/ai294e.pdf>
Gianpietro Bordignon, the
director of WFP in Egypt,
attributed growing malnutrition
among children to “the
successive series of shocks that
affected people, especially the
poorest. This started with the
outbreak of avian flu and the
subsequent killing of poultry
that lowered the intake of
protein, and then the financial
and food crises that followed.”
No data has yet been
collected on the nutritional
status of the estimated 70,000
unofficial garbage collectors
and pig farmers in the Cairo
area who relied on pigs for meat,
income and organic waste.
Economic reforms
Since 1991 Egypt has
embarked on economic reform programmes which have not
necessarily helped the poorest
in society.
A July report by Egypt’s
General Authority for
Investment and Free Zones,
seen by IRIN and entitled
Towards Fair Distribution of
the Fruits of Growth, found
that 66% of the wealth generated
in Egypt is sector specific,
benefiting only those directly
employed by the sector rather
than the economy as a whole.
“Between 2005 and 2008,
the risk of extreme poverty
increased by almost 20%.
Poverty levels are highest in
Upper [southern] Egypt where
70% of the country’s poor live,”
Abu Khatwa said. Upper Egypt
is home to about 17% of the
country’s 82 million people.
WFP’s Bordignon also
pointed out that since Egypt is
not a “least developed
country”, it misses out on
international food aid.
According to the 2009 UNDP
Human Development Report,
<http://hdrstats.undp.org/en/countries/country_fact_sheets/cty_fs
_EGY.html> 23% of the population
are below the poverty
line. Food riots in 2008 were
symptomatic of widespread
poverty.
Date
of upload: 26th Jan 2010
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