Red
Cross launches emergency food aid plan for UK’s hungry
Welfare
cuts and the economic downturn send soaring numbers of people to soup
kitchens and food banks across Europe
11
October, 2013
The
Red Cross will this winter start collecting and distributing food aid
to the needy in Britain for the first time since the Second World
War, as welfare cuts and the economic downturn send soaring numbers
of people to soup kitchens and food banks across Europe.
In
what could be the start of an increased role in Britain for the
Geneva-based charity best known for its work in disaster zones, its
volunteers will be mobilised to go into supermarkets across the
country at the end of November and ask shoppers to donate dry goods.
The British Red Cross will then help the charity FareShare distribute
the packets and tins to food banks nationwide.
Britain
is just one of many countries where families are struggling to put
food on the table. In a report released today into the devastating
humanitarian impact of Europe’s financial crisis, the Red
Cross recorded a 75 per cent increase in the number of people relying
on their food aid over the last three years. At least 43 million
people across the Continent are not getting enough to eat each day
and 120 million are at risk of poverty.
Red
Cross officials called on European governments to try and find new
ways to address to the crisis, as austerity programmes plunge
millions into poverty and hunger.
“While
we fully understand that governments need to save money, we strongly
advise against indiscriminate cuts in public health and social
welfare, as it may cost more in the long run,” said Bekele Geleta,
the Secretary General of the International Federation of the Red
Cross.
In
May charities revealed that more than half a million Britons are now
turning to food banks, with that number expected to have increased
over the summer. Many charities and opposition politicians say
government cuts to welfare have made the situation worse, with
families struggling to make ends meet with the rising prices, the
economic downturn and a benefits squeeze.
Some
senior Tories have dismissed the problem, with Lord Freud claiming in
June that families using food banks were simply after free meals,
while Education Secretary Michael Gove said last month that users
were often those who could not manage their finances properly.
With
winter approaching and fuel bills expected to rise, charities are
struggling to meet the demand, and FareShare asked the Red Cross to
step in. Juliet Mountford, the Red Cross head of UK Service
Development, said they agreed to assist FareShare on the basis of
“strong evidence of an increased need for support on food poverty
issues”.
“For
British Red Cross it’s a toe in the water,” she said. “It’s
the first step in considering whether we ought to be doing more on
today’s food poverty challenge.”
FareShare’s
CEO, Linsday Boswell, said that in the past year the number of
charities they were assisting had risen from 720 to 910. “We need
to be able to operate differently to be able to front up to a crisis
like this,” he said.
While
the Red Cross has in the past provided food to refugees and also to
victims of the flooding in Cumbria in 2009, it would be the first
time it has helped with the nationwide collection and distribution of
food aid since the end of the Second World War.
Chris
Johnes, the UK poverty director for Oxfam, said he was “genuinely
shocked” that the situation had got so dire that the Red Cross
needed to step in. “They don’t do things for reasons of
grandstanding at all,” he told The
Independent.
“The fact that they are doing this... is a very clear signal how
serious things have become.”
Mr
Johnes said that reduced child support and benefits and the
introduction of the controversial “bedroom tax” were making the
situation worse. “We’ve actually got the government
reducing the amount of income going into the pockets of a number of
people and that is leading to in even greater use of food banks,”
he said.
Maria
Eagle MP, Labour’s Shadow Environment Secretary, said: “This
warning... about the growing number of families facing a lack of
nutritious food in Britain should be a wake-up-call to David Cameron
over his failure to tackle the cost of living crisis.”
A
spokesman for the Department for Work and Pensions said there was “no
robust evidence that welfare reforms are linked to increased use of
food banks” and said the Government would be supporting vulnerable
groups with cold weather payments and the winter fuel allowance.
Red
alert: How austerity is hurting Europe
From
the Red Cross report:
Greece
After
two bailouts, Greece has the most stringent austerity programme in
the eurozone. This is having a devastating impact on health and
well-being, the Red Cross says; the suicide rate among women has
doubled since the start of the crisis.
Spain
Austerity
cuts are causing soaring unemployment in Spain, where a quarter of
young people are now out of work. The Red Cross said unemployment in
Europe was “a ticking time bomb” increasing the risk of social
unrest and upheaval.
Russia
Migrants
from all over the world who move to Europe for jobs get no social
support. The report tells the story of Meerby from Kyrgyzstan, who
went to Russia to work but ran out of money and was offered $3,000 to
sell her newborn baby. She refused and fled.
Italy
Up to
150,000 small businesses have closed, sending homelessness soaring.
Some 50,000 people in Milan alone are receiving food aid. The Red
Cross tells how Maurizio, whose business went bust, now lives in the
camper van which was once his holiday home.
Moldova
Human
trafficking is also rising because of the crisis, the report says, as
more people are desperate to move to places where they can earn more
money. Moldovans pay up to €3,800 (£3,200) to be smuggled to
another country, putting women and children at risk of exploitation.
Luxembourg
Even
in the richest nation in the EU, with a per capita income of about
£67,000, the Red Cross is running a programme providing food to the
needy. France, meanwhile, has seen 350,000 people fall below the
poverty line from 2008 to 2011.
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