With more than 2,500 across the United Kingdom, food banks have become a key lifeline and support for many – but also a key indicator that many people don’t have enough to live on, and that our rights are not currently protected.
Back in 2013, food banks had started springing up in cities, towns and villages across the country when the then-United Nations special rapporteur on the right to food, Olivier De Schutter, visited the UK to give a talk on food poverty and this growing phenomenon of ‘food banks’. De Schutter warned us then that the concept of food banks was already widespread across wealthy countries like the US and Canada, and that we should resist them at all costs “becoming a fundamental feature of our social protection system” in the UK. In 2024 we can see that we have completely failed in this.
In 2011/2012, Trussell Trust foodbanks fed 128,697 people. Moving forward over a decade to 2023/2024, the Trussell Trust gave out more than 3.1 million emergency food parcels to hungry people. Hunger has soared and been one of the defining features of the cruel austerity experiment inflicted on the British people. It will be a defining legacy of Tory rule. Food is a fundamental human right, something recognised in international law, which the UK has ratified. However, millions of people rely on parcels of tinned goods, bread, and pasta just so they can put a meal on their table each day. We have children arriving hungry to school, attending breakfast clubs so they can learn with at least something in their belly. We have parents skipping evening meals in the winter so their children can go to sleep warm and fed.
The fact that people are going hungry in a country as rich as the United Kingdom shows just how unbalanced our economy is, and how little our everyday human rights are protected.
This is why over a decade after a previous UN rapporteur addressed the UK, the current UN special rapporteur on the right to food, professor Micheal Fakhri, has put in a request to conduct an official visit. His remit covers hundreds of countries, and he conducts only two visits per year, however he felt it necessary that he come to the UK to report on the situation here.
Big Issue is demanding an end to extreme poverty. Will you ask your MP to join us?