"Creating jobs for some other country, while people are still hungry, doesn't make sense. . . If I was in the position of feeding my own family or creating jobs for someone else, what would I do? What would you do?," International Fund for Agriculture Development President Kanayo Nwanze told PTI.
"The bottom line is that every government has the responsibility to ensure that it can feed its own people," he said while replying to a question whether he supports India's tough stand in the World Trade Organization. Echoing similar sentiments, International Fund for Agricultural Development's Country Director for India Nigel Brett said India has a big task to feed its people. "You have a population of 1.2 billion people.
“You have a mammoth task in your hand of feeding people. . .in this case government has to do everything what it can do to feed its population in the interest. . ."
India decided last week not to ratify WTO's Trade Facilitation Agreement, which is dear to the developed world, without any concrete movement in finding a permanent solution to its public food stock-holding
9 reasons why India's WTO veto shocked the world
Next one year is the most crucial for WTO trade talks
EU, Australia-led group unite against India at WTO
Israel to hold fire for 7 hours after outrage over school strike
Children of war: When tanks replace toys