http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=38988


HEALTH-SOUTH-EAST ASIA: Fortified Flour - Key Nutrition Strategy
By Marwaan Macan-Markar


BANGKOK, Aug 23 (IPS) - When Indonesian women and children tuck into cups of 
'Indomie', a popular brand of instant noodles, they are assured a tasty staple 
healthier than most other brands sold across South-east Asia. 

Indomie, say public health experts, is made from flour that is fortified with 
vitamins and minerals that are essential for a child's growth, both physically 
and mentally. 

This effort is winning praise for Indonesian food processing companies like PT 
Indofood Sukses Makmur from international bodies such as the United Nations 
Children's Fund (UNICEF). Even the Flour Fortification Initiative (FFI), a 
global network of groups campaigning to strengthen flour with micronutrients, 
has a good word for the Jakarta-based corporation that supplies Indonesian 
consumers a range of processed food items, of which 'Indomie' is one. 

''We did it after realising that Indonesia had a micronutrient problem, a 
deficiency of vitamins and minerals in the food consumed,'' says Budianto 
Wijaya, vice president at Indofood. ''The only answer was fortification of the 
flour used for our products.'' 

His company's achievement is one shared by others in the flour milling sector 
and the processed food trade, ensuring that all locally supplied processed food 
products have been fortified. ''You have to have a level playing field for this 
to work. All companies have to agree to supply fortified flour,'' he said 
during a telephone interview from Kuala Lumpur, the Malaysian capital, where he 
is attending a regional conference on the need to fortify food to reduce 
undernutrition in South-east and East Asia. 

Indofood made the switch in 1999, giving rise to a national trend that was also 
supported by the Indonesian government. South-east Asia's largest nation became 
the first country in the region to pass laws in 2002 that made flour 
fortification mandatory for all processed food products. The only other country 
in South-east Asia to follow Indonesia's example is the Philippines, which 
enacted similar laws soon after. 

The U.N. children's agency is using this week's conference in Malaysia, which 
began Wednesday, to convince other governments to follow the lead taken by 
Indonesia and the Philippines to make food fortification mandatory. ''We are 
advocating to make food fortification mandatory, with flour fortification being 
taken up this time,'' Kul Gautam, deputy executive director of UNICEF, told IPS 
from Kuala Lumpur. 

Such a government initiative through laws would ensure that an entire 
population benefits from the enhanced food, he explained. ''If not made 
mandatory, companies will only fortify flour for premium customers and not the 
poor. The laws will ensure that all will benefit.'' 

The urgency to help the vulnerable was conveyed in the background notes 
released by UNICEF at the conference. In East Asia and the Pacific, some 22 
million children are under-nourished due to lack of proper vitamins and 
minerals in their diet, which includes ''17 percent of children under the age 
of five in China (being) anaemic.'' 

In the Philippines, about a third of the children are stunted and underweight, 
while over a quarter of children younger than five are underweight in Indonesia 
and Vietnam, said UNICEF. Even in more affluent Malaysia, close to 38 percent 
of pregnant women were anaemic. 

''Deficiencies of vitamins and minerals in diets make people vulnerable to 
infection and disease,'' added UNICEF. ''Globally, such deficiencies contribute 
annually to the death of one million children younger than five and 
approximately 50,000 young women during pregnancy and childbirth.'' 

Vitamin and mineral deficiency has led to the ''impairment of hundreds of 
millions of growing minds and the lowering of national IQ,'' states FFI, a 
public-private initiative, based in the U.S. city of Atlanta. ''Iron deficiency 
and folic acid deficiency are particularly devastating, causing 200,000 serious 
birth defects annually.'' 

''Wheat flour fortifications offers a tremendous opportunity to improve the 
vitamin and mineral status of populations because more than 400 million tons of 
wheat is eaten each year, most of which is milled by large roller mills,'' adds 
FFI in a blueprint that reveals its ''Call To Action.'' ''Currently, about 26 
percent of the world's countries fortify wheat flour with iron and/or folic 
acid, versus about 19 percent two years ago.'' 

FFI is pushing to achieve a formidable goal by 2008: have 70 percent of wheat 
flour coming out of mills fortified with iron and folic acid. To cross that 
mark work in 14 countries should be accelerated, adds the FFI website hosted by 
Emory University in Atlanta. These countries include China, India, Russia, 
Malaysia, Thailand, and Vietnam, among others. 

''This is a worldwide movement to make fortified flour a normal milling 
practice,'' says Glen Maberly, a professor of public health at Emory University 
and a coordinator of FFI. ''Some millers are prepared to do it; others not. 
Governments need to indicate that this should be done.'' 

Till this drive, it was also normal milling practice to ''strip the minerals 
and vitamins from the wheat,'' Maberly said during a telephone interview from 
Kuala Lumpur. ''The part that is stripped out is always fed to the animals and 
the people get the part that lacks the essential vitamins and minerals.'' 

(END/2007) 

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