This week we commemorate World Food Day, a day that focuses on achieving #ZeroHunger by the year 2030. One of the suggestions that the United Nations made on what farmers and agribusinesses can do to help achieve food security was that “farmers and smallholders should promote gender equality and the empowerment of women, indigenous peoples and youth, because Zero Hunger can only succeed in a society that is fair and equal for all.”

 

With this in mind, the Graça Machel Trust commemorates World Food Day by running a series of stories that illustrate the various roles men, women, civil society, the media and the youth can play to address the challenge of food security. We also draw our attention to what the government needs to do to complement these efforts by investing more in nutrition.

 

In this piece, we explore the work that our network in Zambia is doing to empower journalists so that they cover nutrition related issues effectively and become nutrition advocates.

 

Engaging the media in Zambia

 

The media is critical in influencing the well-being of communities. This blog highlights how vital it is, for advocacy campaigns and visibility, to engage the media in educating the public and raising awareness on the importance of nutrition, as well as its long-term effects. The media can use its collective power to lead and mobilize social actions for nutrition. Media engagement has been key to the successful advocacy work the Civil Society Organisation Scaling up Nutrition Zambia (CSO SUN) has been doing.

 

The media has the power to influence decision. The media sparks issues that get politicians attention. The more attention the topic gets, the higher it gets the attention of authorities,Mathews Mhuru, Country Head – Scaling Up Nutrition, Zambia

 

CSO-SUN has been working with HIVOS (a development aid organisation), Nutrition Association in Zambia and the National Food and Nutrition Commission to conduct bi-annual media training sessions focusing on increased and accurate reporting on nutrition specific issues. Training sessions to date include:

  • The Nutrition situation in Zambia
  • Nutrition and National Development
  • Actions needed by government and other stakeholders. The role of the Media in Nutrition Advocacy and Media Action Plans.

 

The trainings gather representatives from radio, TV and print. The sessions present a platform for networking, building media friendly advocacy campaigns, and capacity and skills development. The impact is a shift in thinking about nutrition. SUN CSOs are becoming a trusted source of information for journalists and this is a window of opportunity to educate communities and drive regional and global nutrition targets towards #ZeroHunger.

 

 

The Graça Machel Trust is the current secretariat of the Eastern and Southern Africa Civil Society Nutrition Network. Its members; the Scaling Up Nutrition (SUN) national civil society alliances (CSAs) and its partners, CARE International and SUN Civil Society Network (CSN) have launched a campaign aimed at increasing government expenditure on Nutrition by three percent in three years. As we celebrate World Food Day this 16th October, we call other media practitioners to join the call to action for #ZeroHunger world by 2030.

 

Read more on our Nutrition Programme here