The UK has seen a sharp increase in the number of people unable to afford to feed themselves at the most basic level, thanks to the worsening economic climate and changes to the benefit system, according to a survey by a leading food charity.
In the past year FareShare, which redistributes waste food from major food manufacturers and supermarkets to social care charities, has seen a 20 percent rise in the number of people it is feeding — from 29,500 a year to 35,000.
And many of those, blighted by unemployment and business failures, are coming from the sorts of stable family backgrounds once considered immune to the worst effects of recession.
The new findings, which are backed up by research from other organizations working in the same field, will make sobering reading for the Britisth Conservative Party — the senior partner in the ruling coalition — which met in Manchester, England, over the weekend for its annual conference, where the direction of the government’s stringent deficit reduction program will be carefully scrutinized.
The number of charities who have signed up to receive food from FareShare, which operates from 17 sites across the UK, has also risen in the past 12 months, from 600 to 700. More than 40 percent of those charities are recording increases in demand for their feeding services of up to 50 percent.
“People in our communities are going to bed hungry because they can’t afford to feed themselves,” said Lindsay Boswell, chief executive of FareShare. “This is a huge problem and it’s right here, in our neighborhoods, on our streets. This is outrageous enough even before you factor in the thousands of tonnes of good food thrown away each year. It’s illogical and frankly immoral that these problems co-exist.”
The food that FareShare distributes would generally end up in landfill sites. It is discarded by major supermarkets such as Sainsbury’s, Tesco and Marks & Spencer, because it’s out of date or surplus to demand or as a result of printing errors on the packaging.
It’s estimated that 3 million tonnes of food like this is being wasted in the UK every year, of which FareShare gets hold of about 1 percent.
“Demand for our food is going up far faster than we can source it,” Boswell said. “As a charity we started out purely interested in liberating waste. We are an environmental charity that gets bloody angry about food being thrown away. However, we’re clear that it is the alleviation of poverty which now leads what we do.”
One of the major changes seen by FareShare and organizations like it is in the type of people they are now feeding. Where once it was single homeless and the chronically destitute, now it’s increasingly families and working people who have fallen on hard times.
In the past year, the Salisbury-based Trussell Trust has seen the number of people it is feeding rise from 41,000 to 61,500.
It runs more than 100 food banks throughout the UK, distributing emergency food parcels to people in dire need who have been referred to it by social care organizations and charities.
“We’re seeing a big increase in what you could call, for want of a better phrase, normal working people, those who have lost their jobs or seen their own businesses go under,” said Jeremy Ravn, manager of the food bank network. “The big problem is that the welfare state is not reacting fast enough to need.”
An increasing time lag between benefits claims being accepted and the date when payments come on stream is, Ravn said, resulting in some people suffering serious hunger.
A spokesperson for the British Department of Work and Pensions denied there had been any changes to the system for paying benefits which could be blamed for the sharp increase in the number of people requiring food aid.
PHISHING: The con might appear convincing, as the scam e-mails can coincide with genuine messages from Apple saying you have run out of storage For a while you have been getting messages from Apple saying “your iCloud storage is full.” They say you have exceeded your storage plan, so documents are no longer being backed up, and photos you take are not being uploaded. You have been resisting Apple’s efforts to get you to pay a minimum of £0.99 (US$1.33) a month for more storage, but it seems that you cannot keep putting off the inevitable: You have received an e-mail which says your iCloud account has been blocked, and your photos and videos would be deleted very soon. To keep them you need
For two decades, researchers observed members of the Ngogo chimpanzee group of Kibale National Park in Uganda spend their days eating fruits and leaves, resting, traveling and grooming in their tropical rainforest abode, but this stable community then fractured and descended into years of deadly violence. The researchers are now describing the first clearly documented example of a group of wild chimpanzees splitting into two separate factions, with one launching a series of coordinated attacks against the other. Adult males and infants were targeted, with 28 deaths. “Biting, pounding the victim with their hands, dragging them, kicking them — mostly adult males,
The Israeli military has demolished entire villages as part of its invasion of south Lebanon, rigging homes with explosives and razing them to the ground in massive remote detonations. The Guardian reviewed three videos posted by the Israeli military and on social media, which showed Israel carrying out mass detonations in the villages of Taybeh, Naqoura and Deir Seryan along the Israel-Lebanon border. Lebanese media has reported more mass detonations in other border villages, but satellite imagery was not readily available to verify these claims. The demolitions came after Israeli Minister of Defense Israel Katz called for the destruction of
SUPERFAN: The Japanese PM played keyboard in a Deep Purple tribute band in middle school and then switched to drums at university, she told the British rock band Legendary British rock band Deep Purple yesterday made Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s day with a brief visit to their high-profile superfan as they returned to the nation they first toured more than half a century ago. Takaichi’s reputation as an amateur drummer, and a fan of hard rock and heavy metal has been well documented, and she has referred to Deep Purple as one of her favorite bands along with the likes of Black Sabbath and Iron Maiden. “You are my god,” a giddy Takaichi said in English to Deep Purple drummer Ian Paice, presenting him with a set of made-in-Japan