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May 13: Global walk to end child hunger
11 May 2007 14:19:00 GMT
Source: WFP
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Location: Rome

On Sunday, 13 May 2007, hundreds of thousands of people worldwide will walk together over a 24-hour period in each of the planet’s time zones, to deliver a message: child hunger has no place in this world and citizens across the globe can put an end to it.

WFP together with its major corporate partners, TNT and Unilever, are teaming up with an array of celebrities, dignitaries, employees, NGO partners, family, friends and people affected by hunger themselves, to “Fight Hunger: Walk the World”.

Unique event

“Walk the World brings together any and all who care about child hunger,” said Josette Sheeran, WFP Executive Director. “This unique event, involves the very people who suffer from hunger themselves -- men, women and children displaced by civil conflicts and children who receive daily meals at schools in developing countries.”

Funds raised through Walk the World will go to WFP’s Global School Feeding Programme.

This initiative links food and education by offering free meals to world’s most vulnerable children.

Making a huge difference

“Few people know that it only costs 19 US cents a day to feed a hungry child in school. It proves that even the smallest contribution can help make a huge difference,” said Peter Bakker, CEO of TNT (global leader in mail and express delivery) and the initiator of Walk the World in 2003.

Beginning in New Zealand at 10:00 in the morning and moving sequentially through major capitals and small villages in Asia, Europe, Africa and the Americas, Walk the World aims to engage citizens worldwide to raise awareness and funds and assist more hungry children to go to school.

Last year, WFP provided school meals for 19.4 million children in 71 countries. All too often children – particularly girls – are deprived of education because their families cannot afford to send them to school.

Vicious poverty cycle

Yet education is one of the best ways of permanently escaping the vicious intergenerational cycle of poverty, illiteracy, poor health and hunger.

In 2006, hundreds of thousands people in sub-Saharan Africa joined the Walk to call for an end to child hunger that affects 400 million children today.

This year the word has spread and more people are walking across sub-Saharan Africa, from Liberia to Swaziland, South Africa to Uganda.

Force for change

As with every successful movement, the core force for change is coming from the very people who know what is like to be hungry, turning this unique event into a global manifestation against child hunger.

Hunger is the greatest threat to health worldwide. Every year more people die from hunger and hunger-related causes than from AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis combined.

There are more than 850 million chronically hungry people in the world today.

Unseen reality

2007 marks the fifth anniversary of this unique event and also the arrival of Unilever (one of the world’s largest consumer goods companies) to work collectively with other partners to end child hunger.

“If ignored, child hunger will remain a daily reality that ravages millions and goes unseen by most. Walk the World brings this otherwise invisible problem into the spotlight,” said Vindi Banga, President of Foods Unilever. “There is no excuse for children to be chronically hungry, day in and day out in the 21st century.”

How to help

Those wishing to step in may do so by organising a walk, joining a walk, by sponsoring a participant, donating to a Walk or by making a general donation all through www.FightHunger.org.

The website carries information about each of the Walk the World events, stories, photos, blogs, an online shop, videos, music, helpful hints and more, providing a global forum and map of action to fight child hunger.

Contacts

Click here for your nearest media contact.

High resolution photos are available from Rein Skullerud on +39 06 6513 2687.

World Food Programme news

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A child is carried by his father during a protest outside the Philippine International Convention Center in Manila May 30, 2007, where the national canvassing of votes is being carried out. The Philippine elections were held on May 14 with about 75 percent of 45 million voters casting ballots for half of the 24 seats in the Senate, all 275 slots in the House of Representatives and almost 18,000 posts in local government.



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