Shortages are returning to a continent with literal red flags to show the virus is compounding poverty.
Food distribution last month at Chácara Santa Luzia in Brazil (Paulo H. Carvalho/AgĂŞncia BrasĂlia/Flickr) |
It was a cry for help, the word “hambre” (hunger) projected against the Torre TelefĂłnica building in downtown Santiago, Chile’s capital. It abruptly woke up a city that has been under total quarantine since mid-May. “We are locked up and we are starving,” said JosĂ© Morales, a resident of El Bosque, an impoverished shanty town south of the Chilean capital.
The
light projection against the 1990’s mobile phone shaped telecommunications
building – an icon of the now crumbling Chilean neoliberal economic model –
happened just a few hours after a violent clash on 18 May between the police
and dozens of El Bosque residents. “Those who are not dying of the corona are
dying of hunger,” Morales told me on the phone. “Yes sir, hunger is back in
Chile.”
đź”´DURING THE PANDEMIC, CHILE MEANS HUNGER (HAMBRE) pic.twitter.com/4JvKfw0FrT
— El Pueblo Informa (@_PuebloInforma) May 19, 2020
With
almost 640,000 cases and more than 35,000 deaths, Latin America has become the
new focus of the coronavirus crisis. The pandemic has landed in a region where
30% of its 629 million inhabitants can be classed as poor, and about 10% live
in what can be regarded as misery. In its sprawling and impoverished slums –
where around 117 million poor live – a new pandemic is breeding, hunger.
In
Brazil, with the second-highest number of cases of coronavirus in the world,
hunger is ferociously biting. It seems to be a long time since 2003–14, when
the country under the Workers’ Party managed to pull 29 million out of poverty.
That was a time when Brazil, the largest economy of Latin America, came off the
UN map of hunger.
The
Brazilian impoverished favelas, home to 13 million, are not only agonizing
about the lack of food but also about the lack of clean water – so fundamental
to fighting the virus. For Rodrigo Afonso, executive director of the NGO Ação
da Cidadania (Citizen Action), “tens of millions of Brazilians are in a
situation of food insecurity”.
According
to the World Bank, this year Brazil’s economy will contract by 5%. This is bad
news for a quarter of the Brazilian population – some 50 million – who live in
poverty and under the shadow of hunger. “Where there is hunger there is no
hope,” once said former Brazilian president Luiz “Lula” da Silva. In Brazil –
led by health hazardous president, Jair Bolsonaro – hope is in short supply.
Waiting
for food distribution last month at Chácara Santa Luzia in Brazil (Paulo H.
Carvalho/AgĂŞncia BrasĂlia/Flickr) |
Globally,
due to the coronavirus pandemic’s economic crisis, the number of people
suffering from acute hunger could double to 265 million this year, according to
the UN World Food Program. In Latin America and the Caribbean hunger today
affects 42.5 million people.
According
to Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean, CEPAL, this year
Latin American will experience its biggest economic contraction in history.
During 2020 the CEPAL expects that poverty would increase by 4.4 percentage
points from 30.3 to 34.7% – this means 29 new million poor. Between poverty and
hunger there is a terrifying slippery slope.
Argentina
is the second largest economy in Latin America. According to the National
Institute of Statistic and Census of Argentina (INDEC, in Spanish) 35.5% of its
population of approximately 45 million live in poverty. The government has
reported that 11 million are now relying on food assistance – this is a
substantial increase from 8 million pre-pandemic. The one-off $10,000
Argentinean pesos – approximately US$ 163.42 – that the government distributed
last April among the poorest families was not enough to guarantee food.
All
across Latin America hunger is rapidly becoming a powerful detonator of anger –
looting, unrest, violence and banging empty pots are on the rise.
After
Brazil and Mexico, Colombia, with approximately 48 million, is the third most
populated Latin American country. In Colombia hunger has a colour – red. Since
April when the quarantine started, red rags such as tea towels, t-shirts and
even underwear have waved from impoverished Colombian homes signalling the lack
of enough food as a call for help.
The
red rag symbol has spread rapidly in several shanty towns of the country –
where approximately 6.2 million live.
The
first red rags began appearing in Soacha – a sprawling slum city in Bogota
where one million people live or rather try to survive. Soacha is also one of
the largest concentrations of people displaced from the five decades of civil
war. Thousands of Venezuelans live there too – refugees from Venezuela’s
atrocious economic crisis. “I am not as concerned with the coronavirus as I am
with hunger in this city,” warned Soacha’s mayor Juan Carlos Saldarriaga in
March. “If we do not turn on all the alarms and international cooperation, we
will have more deaths from hunger than from coronaviruses.”
Drive-thru Covid-19 testing, Brasilia (Leopoldo Silva/AgĂŞncia Senado/Flickr) |
Latin
American food security has worsened in the last few years, according to a
report from the UN Food and Agriculture Organization, FAO. According to this
organisation, a third of the population of Latin America and the Caribbean
already live in a precarious state of “food insecurity.” And the coronavirus,
the report said, will exacerbate the problem. “In Latin America, hunger is just
around the corner,” Julio Berdegue, the Latin American representative of FAO
told the Chilean newspaper El Mercurio. “It is essential to keep the food
system alive so that the health crisis does not turn into a food crisis,” he
said.
Perhaps it is already too late – hunger is back, as the resident of Santiago’s El Bosque shanty town told me over the phone. All across Latin America hunger is rapidly becoming a powerful detonator of anger – looting, unrest, violence and banging empty pots are on the rise. And authorities are resorting to the usual measures, police and military repression, false fixes and shallow promises. In the era of the coronavirus, right now, Latin America is gliding into its darkest days yet.
Source : www.lowyinstitute.org