• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

Bush releases $200 million in emergency food aid

WASHINGTON
Mon Apr 14, 2008 5:37pm EDT
U.S. President George W. Bush walks from the Oval Office to present the Commander-in-Chief's Trophy to the United States Naval Academy football team in the Rose Garden at the White House in Washington, April 14, 2008. REUTERS/Jim Young

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President George W. Bush on Monday ordered $200 million more in U.S. emergency food aid to be made available to help alleviate food shortages in Africa and elsewhere, the White House said.

Bush took action a day after top finance and development officials from around the world called for urgent action to stem rising food prices, warning that social unrest would spread unless the cost of basic staples was contained.

"This additional food aid will address the impact of rising commodity prices on U.S. emergency food aid programs, and be used to meet unanticipated food aid needs in Africa and elsewhere," the White House said in a statement. It said the assistance would be made available through the U.S. Agency for International Development.

(Reporting by Matt Spetalnick, Editing by Sandra Maler)



More from Reuters

Photo

Senate on track to pass healthcare bill

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Senate Democrats moved closer on Monday to passing landmark healthcare legislation by Christmas after scoring a win in the first big test vote and gaining the support of a powerful lobbying group for doctors. | Video

A view of a cemetery for foreign prisoners in the settlement of Spassk in central Kazakhstan December 10, 2009. REUTERS/Shamil Zhumatov

Despair in the Kazakh steppe

In icy Kazakhstan, barbed wire and crumbling barracks stand in testament to the decades of cruelty millions of ethnic Germans endured in Soviet gulag camps during Stalin's Great Terror campaign.  Full Article | Slideshow 

Two men shake hands in a file photo.    REUTERS/File

Let's make a deal

The battered M&A sector will make a tepid recovery in the coming year and three hot sectors will lead the way, according to a Thomson Reuters analysis.  Full Article