1 / 14

MOZAMBIQUE : Puting the Right to Food in Practice

MOZAMBIQUE : Puting the Right to Food in Practice. Right to Food Forum Roma, 1 – 3 Out. 2008. The International and National Framework of FSN. World Food Summit, Rome, 1996; 1998: GoM approved Food Security and Nutrition Strategy (ESAN I).

laken
Download Presentation

MOZAMBIQUE : Puting the Right to Food in Practice

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. MOZAMBIQUE: PutingtheRight to FoodinPractice Right to Food Forum Roma, 1 – 3 Out. 2008

  2. TheInternationalandNationalFrameworkofFSN • World Food Summit, Rome, 1996; • 1998: GoMapprovedFood Security and Nutrition Strategy (ESAN I). • The Technical Secretariat for Food Security and Nutrition (SETSAN) was created, based on the FSN Working Group.

  3. ESAN I: 2005 EVALUATION • Strengths • Institutionalization of the FSN working group • Multi-sector approach • Focus on three pillars: availability, access, use & utilization • Weaknesses • No integration of the Right to Food approach; • Missing the linkages HIV/AIDS – FSN; • Focused on rural FN Insecurity; • No plan & budget; • No clear-cut indicators of M&A.

  4. ESAN I: EVALUATION • Main Recommendation • To update ESAN I: • including • the new pillars • missing issues That is: • Formulation of ESAN II.

  5. ESAN II: FORMULATION PROCESS (2006-2007) • Interviewswith Key Informants- Government and Civil Society; • Participatory consultation at national, and sub-national levels; • Workshops: national and sub-national level; and • Meetingsof SETSAN Consultative Council.

  6. ESAN II: Status • Slogan: “Food Security and Nutrition: a Right for a Hunger-free and Healthy Mozambique”. • This strategy calls for integrated approach: • activities that promote FSN; • Safety nets and social protection. • ESAN II approved in October 2007; • Advocacy of ESAN II in progress - starting with II FSN Symposium.

  7. ESAN II: Updated Pillars • Food Production and availability of food; • Access; • Use and Utilization; • Stability; • Adequacy. • Pillars look at socially, culturally and environmentally acceptability and legal mechanisms to enforce the RtF.

  8. ESAN II: Challenges • IMPLEMENTATION of the strategy; • Setting up COORDINATION mechanisms; • Enactment of the RIGHT TO FOOD LAW.

  9. II SYMPOSIUM ON FSN • Maputo, Moz, June: 18-20, 2008 • Attendance: 728 participants: • Mozambique delegates; • International delegates : Angola, Brazil, Cape-Vert, São Tomé e Príncipe, FAO HQ. • Official opening by The President of the Republic of Mozambique.

  10. II SYMPOSIUM: Objectives Objectives General: • To advocate for FSN and RtF and discuss appropriate ways to accelerate the reduction of Hunger and Chronic Malnutrition in Mozambique. Specific: • To disseminate ESAN II and its PASAN; • To advocate the legislation on RtF in Mozambique.

  11. II SYMPOSIUM: Declaration • Food security as a cross-cutting concept: The role of each sector; • Investing in a future free of hunger; • Coordination of implementation of ESAN II; • Decentralization of the FSN programmes; • The role of the legislation for realizing the right to food in Mozambique.

  12. RtF: What was done • Diagnosticstudies on policies, strategies, plans and programmes related to FNS, HIV/AIDS, Budget and Legislation; • Manual for identification of vulnerable rights holders: OVCs and PLWHA, pregnant women and other vulnerable people.

  13. ESAN II and RtF in policies/regulations • Green Revolution Strategy: to increase food supply; • Action Plan for Food Production: to face rising prices; • Health and nutrition programmes: Nutritional vigilance, education & rehabilitation centres, Supplements, Primary health care; • Employment generation; • Social transfers as social protection tools: to most vulnerable households; • Approval of the Law of Right to Adequate Food through public consultation.

  14. Thank You Obrigado

More Related