To do this, they considered, “individuals, communities and the people must be provided with whatever is needed to help the most fragile, especially children, adolescents and the elderly.”
“In the face of a crisis, technocratic paradigms are not enough, whether state-centric or market-centric, the community is necessary,” they stated, recalling the community work carried out by parish soup kitchens, evangelical communities and popular movements in the time of pandemic, and calling on the State to national, provincial and municipal levels, to take advantage of these spaces by providing aid “without delay” so that “no one is left without their daily bread.”
Taking into account “the complexity of the crisis,” they warned that care spaces that feed those in need cannot do it alone. In that sense, they proposed applying programs such as the UNDP (United Nations Development Program) “which have proven to have a very positive impact, are easily auditable and can be applied to all these places.”