
© Juan Mabromata/AFP/Getty Images
Riot police guard a supermarket attacked by food rioters in San Fernando, Buenos Aires.
The link between intensifying inequality, debt, climate change, fossil fuel dependency and the global food crisis is undeniable
Just over two years since Egypt's dictator President Hosni Mubarak resigned , little has changed. Cairo's infamous
Tahrir Square has remained a continual site of clashes between demonstrators and
security forces, despite a newly elected president. It's the same story in
Tunisia, and
Libya where
protests and
civil unrest have persisted under now ostensibly democratic governments.
The problem is that the political changes brought about by the Arab spring were largely cosmetic. Scratch beneath the surface, and one finds the same deadly combination of environmental, energy and economic crises.
We now know that the
fundamental triggers for the Arab spring were unprecedented food price rises. The first sign things were unravelling hit in 2008, when a
global rice shortage coincided with dramatic increases in staple food prices,
triggering food riots across the middle east, north Africa and south Asia. A month before the fall of the Egyptian and Tunisian regimes, the UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO)
reported record high food prices for dairy, meat, sugar and cereals.
Since 2008, global food prices have been consistently higher than in preceding decades, despite wild fluctuations. This year, even with prices stabilising, the food price index
remains at 210 -
which some experts believe is the threshold beyond which civil unrest becomes probable. The FAO warns that 2013 could see prices increase later owing to tight grain stocks from last year's
adverse crop weather.