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IRB reaffirms commitment to Tackle Hunger

Saturday 8 October 2011, 1:13PM

By Rugby World Cup 2011

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The Tackle Hunger campaign was launched at RWC 2003
The Tackle Hunger campaign was launched at RWC 2003 Credit: Rugby World Cup 2011
  • Winning partnership continues for RWC 2011 
  • Global platform to Tackle Hunger
  • UN delighted with programme

Rugby World Cup 2011 in New Zealand is set to boost the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) after the International Rugby Board and its humanitarian partner extended the successful Tackle Hunger campaign and highlighted some features of the in-tournament promotion already underway. 

Launched in 2003 at the Rugby World Cup in Australia, the Tackle Hunger campaign was born out of a desire by the IRB to meet its social responsibility obligations as the world governing body for Rugby Union and to help the UN in its challenge of meeting the eight UN Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).

Since its inception, the Tackle Hunger campaign has as its main objectives to raise awareness of WFP, draw attention to the plight of the world's hungry and connect the global Rugby community with the programme. Rugby’s showcase quadrennial event has played a significant role in achieving these objectives.

The Rugby World Cup 2011 activation builds on the tremendous success of the campaign at previous Tournaments in Australia and France and is raising awareness through a combination of in-stadium visibility, advertising boards, programme adverts and public service videos being shown in stadia, at RWC Fanzones, online and via tournament broadcasters, with an estimated cumulative global audience of over four billion people. And for the first time, those wishing to support the campaign with a direct donation can do so by visiting the Tackle Hunger secure donations page at https://www.wfp.org/donate/tacklehunger.

In addition, the Rugby World Cup 2011 Tackle Hunger campaign is using a variety of social media platforms to connect directly with Rugby fans across the world - a recent release regarding the WFP’s response to the famine in East Africa was also sent to over 1.2 million Rugby World Cup Facebook followers and 46,000 Twitter followers.

With a global platform and shared values of respect, integrity, passion, solidarity and teamwork, the IRB and WFP partnership has been a winning combination. Promoting the Tackle Hunger programme across the IRB's family of international tournaments at all levels of the Game has assisted WFP to help raise awareness of their work and the daily struggle the world’s hungry face.

International Rugby Board Chairman Bernard Lapasset said: “We are proud of our association with the United Nations World Food Programme and to be supporting its important work in tackling global hunger. We all have a part to play in helping the UN achieve the Millennium Development Goals and the Tackle Hunger campaign, with the support of Rugby fans around the world, can contribute in some way to alleviating the plight of those less fortunate than ourselves and have a real and positive impact on the lives of so many where hunger is present.”

Josette Sheeran, Executive Director of WFP, said: “I want to thank the IRB and all the wonderful rugby players and fans in New Zealand and around the world who have responded with care and generosity to the Tackle Hunger campaign. People think that solving hunger is an insurmountable task, but every time someone learns about WFP, visits the IRB or WFP sites, donates to help feed a hungry school child, we are building a momentum to defeat hunger, end malnutrition and help save a generation of young people that otherwise might be doomed to a diminished tomorrow.”

A key moment in the history of the campaign came in 2005 when the IRB staged a fundraising match at Twickenham between teams of international players from the northern and southern hemispheres. It raised US$3.35 million in vital funds that were donated to WFP's relief and reconstruction work in areas hit by the Asian tsunami of December 2004 and was the largest single donation the WFP had ever received from a sporting event.

Following the historic visit of the Webb Ellis Cup to the United Nations earlier this year, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon commented that: “Rugby is a popular sport that promotes health, teamwork and friendship. In these difficult times, when people are struggling with poverty ... conflict ... sometimes both ... Rugby can offer a chance for joy and fun."

To find out more about the Tackle Hunger campaign, please visit www.irb.com/wfp or to make a donation, go to https://www.wfp.org/donate/tacklehunger.