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UN official hails seven mothers on hunger strike outside Downing Street

The Food Foundation charity found one in four mothers in Britain are skipping meals to feed their children.

Tim Sigsworth
Friday 24 March 2023 12:11 EDT
(Jonathan Brady/PA)
(Jonathan Brady/PA) (PA Wire)

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A United Nations (UN) official has hailed seven mothers who have been on hunger strike outside Downing Street and the Houses of Parliament for the past six days in protest against food poverty.

Dame Christiana Figueres, executive secretary of the United Nationsā€™ framework convention on climate change, wiped tears from her eyes as she visited the mothers on Friday afternoon to mark the final day of their strike, which started on Motherā€™s Day on March 19.

The group ā€“ Emma Hopkins, Jo Hook, Erica Curren, Dr Grace Thompson, Dr Karen Gilmore, Chantelle Norton and Anna Palmer ā€“ launched the strike after the Food Foundation charity found one in four mothers in Britain are skipping meals to feed their children.

Ms Figueres told the PA news agency: ā€œI came here to show support for these mothers who are standing in for the one in four mothers in the UK who are having to choose between feeding themselves and feeding their children.

ā€œIt is very inspiring and letā€™s remember that they are here in solidarity with so many millions of other mothers who canā€™t even come here.

ā€œFor this handful of brave women to be here and stand in and raise the voices of so many other mothers who canā€™t come ā€“ that takes courage, that takes stamina, thatā€™s leadership.

ā€œAction has to be taken as itā€™s just not possible that UK society tolerates something like this.

ā€œThis is the UK. This is one of the richest countries in the world.ā€

A washing line of baby grows emblazoned with the words ā€œtheir futureā€ and a love heart formed the backdrop to the mothersā€™ protest outside the Houses of Parliament on Friday afternoon.

They handed out leaflets to passers-by and laid a table with plates bearing messages that included ā€œensure everyone has enoughā€, ā€œinvest in resilient foodā€ and ā€œgood food should not be a privilegeā€.

Ms Hopkins, a 54-year-old herbalist and mother-of-four from Totnes, Devon, told PA her head was ā€œall over the placeā€ after going without food for the full six days.

She said: ā€œI have found it really puts you in touch with your emotions so Iā€™m feeling even more and more heartbroken.

ā€œIā€™m just heartbroken really. Iā€™ve done a certain amount of crying. Weā€™ve all been emotional at different times.

ā€œIt feels like a symbolic action for all those mothers who are waking up unable to feed themselves or their children and weā€™re here for them.

ā€œWeā€™ve had lots of support, lots of brilliant interactions with MPs and connections in terms of moving this forward and where we go next.

ā€œMy headā€™s all over the place. My brain is not functioning as it might but Iā€™m doing fairly well considering, actually.ā€

The seven mothers have gathered outside Downing Street or the Houses of Parliament with their supporters between 10am and 4pm every day since Motherā€™s Day.

Others have gone without food for fewer than six days or are on strike in solidarity elsewhere in the country.

After going without food for so long, the women will have to gradually return their diets to normal and avoid complex carbohydrates like beans and wholegrains.

Also striking for the full six days was Ms Norton, 51, who works for a food bank in Totnes and is mother to a teenage boy.

She told PA: ā€œIā€™ve delivered food to people who havenā€™t eaten for four days before. It breaks your heart.

ā€œOur caseload has quadrupled since before the pandemic.

ā€œIt feels as though what we are doing is a sticking plaster ā€“ there needs to be more fundamental reform.ā€

She added: ā€œI felt quite physically unwell for a couple of days but my spirit has stayed fairly high.

ā€œWeā€™re doing this as a group and we have a cause behind us and we have brilliant support.

ā€œHow much worse it would be if you were hungry because you couldnā€™t afford food and you didnā€™t have that support network and you didnā€™t know how to get help.

ā€œYour mind becomes fuzzy after a while from the lack of food and so it might affect your logic to be able to go to Citizenā€™s Advice and get some emergency financial help.ā€

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