(Recasts, adds additional needs, U.S. funding; adds byline)
By Missy Ryan
WASHINGTON, May 6 (Reuters) - The World Food Program, facing an unprecedented surge in the price of food it buys for the world's hungry, has secured about 60 percent of the extra funds it needs to cover planned aid donations this year, the head of the United Nations agency said on Tuesday.
"We put out an extra appeal for $755 million and we're about 60 percent of the way there," WFP Executive Director Josette Sheeran said during a speech at a Washington think tank.
But the agency said it already has had to cut some of the food rations it provides, and its $755-million gap does not include new, emerging hunger needs that will require an additional $418 million to $430 million this year.
Sheeran, a former Bush administration official, said the world's food delivery system was "groaning under the strain of sky-rocketing demand, the soaring cost of inputs, depleted stocks, crop loss due to drought, floods and severe weather."
Higher global prices for basic foodstuffs such as bread, rice and milk may have brought on a crisis that could be the first truly globalized humanitarian emergency, she said.
World leaders are calling for urgent steps to ease the soaring costs, to create a larger cushion of food across harvests, and to diffuse the food panic that has triggered protests across the developing world.
"It is said that a hungry man is an angry man," Sheeran said. Global food prices jumped an annual 43 percent through March, according to the U.S. government.
The trend is believed to be deepening poverty, especially for food-importing nations like Nicaragua, pushing more people into hunger as buying power shrinks for food aid budgets.
Donor nations like Canada, Australia and Britain have stepped up pledges to help WFP cope with soaring costs. The United States, the world's largest food aid donor and WFP's top supporter, last month released 260,000 tonnes of wheat from an emergency crop trust.
Last week, President George W. Bush announced plans, which must be approved by Congress, to spend an additional $770 million on food aid and agriculture development in the fiscal year beginning Oct. 1.
For countries where people spend up to three-quarters of their income on food, experts say time is of the essence.
The Bush administration already has requested $350 million in last-minute food aid funding for this fiscal year, a perennial addition to annual budgeted funds.
On Tuesday, Democratic leaders in the U.S. House of Representatives announced that they would try to add another $500 million for emergency food aid.
Rep. David Obey of Wisconsin, chairman of the House Appropriations Committee, said the money would be attached to a massive Iraq war funding bill that could be debated on the House floor on Thursday.
It was unclear if Bush would veto the spending bill if it contained too much spending that he did not call for.
The Bush administration also is seeking flexibility to buy more food overseas for aid programs, in hopes of making aid dollars go further. (Additional reporting by Richard Cowan; Editing by David Gregorio)
((missy.ryan@thomsonreuters.com; + 202-898-8376; Reuters Messaging: missy.ryan.reuters.com@reuters.net)) Keywords: USA FOODAID/WFP
CHICAGO, May 6 (Reuters) - Ohio Attorney General Marc Dann, who has been investigating companies involved with subprime mortgages, was under mounting pressure on Tuesday to resign or face possible impeachment in the wake of a sexual harassment probe in the attorney general's office.
Dann released an e-mail on Monday that he sent to his staff saying he intended to stay in office. On Friday, he announced the firing or resignation of three staffers in his office and said he had had a relationship with another staff member.
On Tuesday, the Democrat minority in the House was looking into procedural issues for impeachment, according to Phil Saken, communications director for House Democrats. He said it has been 188 years since Ohio tried to impeach a state official.
"The information we have leads to the conclusion it would be extremely difficult if not impossible for him to continue on as attorney general," Saken said.
Calls for Dann's resignation have come from fellow Democrats, such as Gov. Ted Strickland and State Treasurer Richard Cordray, as well as Republicans, including the heads of the Ohio House and Senate.
In January, Dann filed a lawsuit on behalf of a state pension fund against Freddie Mac <FRE.N>, accusing the mortgage finance company of securities fraud for failing to disclose risks from its subprime mortgage-related investments.
Dann's office has also sent civil investigative subpoenas to a number of subprime mortgage companies as part of a probe of possible anti-trust and civil rights law violations, and violations of Ohio's consumer sales practices. His office has declined to name the companies.
Ohio has been hit hard by the subprime-mortgage crisis, ranking eighth among states in foreclosure rates in the first quarter of 2008, according to RealtyTrac. (Reporting by Karen Pierog; Editing by Toni Reinhold) ((karen.pierog@thomsonreuters.com; +1-312-408-8647; Reuters Messaging: karen.pierog.reuters.com@reuters.net)) Keywords: OHIO ATTORNEYGENERAL/IMPEACHMENT
CHICAGO, May 6 (Reuters) - Ohio Attorney General Marc Dann, who has been investigating companies involved with subprime mortgages, was under mounting pressure on Tuesday to resign or face possible impeachment in the wake of a sexual harassment probe in the attorney general's office.
Dann released an e-mail on Monday that he sent to his staff saying he intended to stay in office. On Friday, he announced the firing or resignation of three staffers in his office and said he had had a relationship with another staff member.
On Tuesday, the Democrat minority in the House was looking into procedural issues for impeachment, according to Phil Saken, communications director for House Democrats. He said it has been 188 years since Ohio tried to impeach a state official.
"The information we have leads to the conclusion it would be extremely difficult if not impossible for him to continue on as attorney general," Saken said.
Calls for Dann's resignation have come from fellow Democrats, such as Gov. Ted Strickland and State Treasurer Richard Cordray, as well as Republicans, including the heads of the Ohio House and Senate.
In January, Dann filed a lawsuit on behalf of a state pension fund against Freddie Mac <FRE.N>, accusing the mortgage finance company of securities fraud for failing to disclose risks from its subprime mortgage-related investments.
Dann's office has also sent civil investigative subpoenas to a number of subprime mortgage companies as part of a probe of possible anti-trust and civil rights law violations, and violations of Ohio's consumer sales practices. His office has declined to name the companies.
Ohio has been hit hard by the subprime-mortgage crisis, ranking eighth among states in foreclosure rates in the first quarter of 2008, according to RealtyTrac. (Reporting by Karen Pierog; Editing by Toni Reinhold) ((karen.pierog@thomsonreuters.com; +1-312-408-8647; Reuters Messaging: karen.pierog.reuters.com@reuters.net)) Keywords: OHIO ATTORNEYGENERAL/IMPEACHMENT
CHICAGO, May 6 (Reuters) - Ohio Attorney General Marc Dann, who has been investigating companies involved with subprime mortgages, was under mounting pressure on Tuesday to resign or face possible impeachment in the wake of a sexual harassment probe in the attorney general's office.
Dann released an e-mail on Monday that he sent to his staff saying he intended to stay in office. On Friday, he announced the firing or resignation of three staffers in his office and said he had had a relationship with another staff member.
On Tuesday, the Democrat minority in the House was looking into procedural issues for impeachment, according to Phil Saken, communications director for House Democrats. He said it has been 188 years since Ohio tried to impeach a state official.
"The information we have leads to the conclusion it would be extremely difficult if not impossible for him to continue on as attorney general," Saken said.
Calls for Dann's resignation have come from fellow Democrats, such as Gov. Ted Strickland and State Treasurer Richard Cordray, as well as Republicans, including the heads of the Ohio House and Senate.
In January, Dann filed a lawsuit on behalf of a state pension fund against Freddie Mac <FRE.N>, accusing the mortgage finance company of securities fraud for failing to disclose risks from its subprime mortgage-related investments.
Dann's office has also sent civil investigative subpoenas to a number of subprime mortgage companies as part of a probe of possible anti-trust and civil rights law violations, and violations of Ohio's consumer sales practices. His office has declined to name the companies.
Ohio has been hit hard by the subprime-mortgage crisis, ranking eighth among states in foreclosure rates in the first quarter of 2008, according to RealtyTrac. (Reporting by Karen Pierog; Editing by Toni Reinhold) ((karen.pierog@thomsonreuters.com; +1-312-408-8647; Reuters Messaging: karen.pierog.reuters.com@reuters.net)) Keywords: OHIO ATTORNEYGENERAL/IMPEACHMENT
CHICAGO, May 6 (Reuters) - Ohio Attorney General Marc Dann, who has been investigating companies involved with subprime mortgages, was under mounting pressure on Tuesday to resign or face possible impeachment in the wake of a sexual harassment probe in the attorney general's office.
Dann released an e-mail on Monday that he sent to his staff saying he intended to stay in office. On Friday, he announced the firing or resignation of three staffers in his office and said he had had a relationship with another staff member.
On Tuesday, the Democrat minority in the House was looking into procedural issues for impeachment, according to Phil Saken, communications director for House Democrats. He said it has been 188 years since Ohio tried to impeach a state official.
"The information we have leads to the conclusion it would be extremely difficult if not impossible for him to continue on as attorney general," Saken said.
Calls for Dann's resignation have come from fellow Democrats, such as Gov. Ted Strickland and State Treasurer Richard Cordray, as well as Republicans, including the heads of the Ohio House and Senate.
In January, Dann filed a lawsuit on behalf of a state pension fund against Freddie Mac <FRE.N>, accusing the mortgage finance company of securities fraud for failing to disclose risks from its subprime mortgage-related investments.
Dann's office has also sent civil investigative subpoenas to a number of subprime mortgage companies as part of a probe of possible anti-trust and civil rights law violations, and violations of Ohio's consumer sales practices. His office has declined to name the companies.
Ohio has been hit hard by the subprime-mortgage crisis, ranking eighth among states in foreclosure rates in the first quarter of 2008, according to RealtyTrac. (Reporting by Karen Pierog; Editing by Toni Reinhold) ((karen.pierog@thomsonreuters.com; +1-312-408-8647; Reuters Messaging: karen.pierog.reuters.com@reuters.net)) Keywords: OHIO ATTORNEYGENERAL/IMPEACHMENT
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