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ZIMBABWE:
UN crop assessment on hold
IRIN
News
May 10, 2004
JOHANNESBURG, 10 May
2004 (IRIN) - UN officials in Zimbabwe said on Monday they were still
waiting for official confirmation from the government that a joint agency
assessment of crop production has been cancelled.
The World Food Programme (WFP) and the Food and Agriculture Organisation
reportedly withdrew their teams from the field on Friday after being told
that the agriculture ministry had called off the crop inspection.
"We have written to the government for clarification," UN Humanitarian
Coordinator Victor Angelo told IRIN. "We were invited to start the field
work, and now we have been asked to stop, and we need a formal letter
that states we have to stop, and why."
He said the assessment teams, which had only been in the field a few days,
had been withdrawn to the capital, Harare, where they were "waiting for
further instructions".
WFP spokesman Richard Lee said crop assessment missions, conducted in
several countries in the region at this time of the year, provided good
estimates of harvest production. Zimbabwe has faced three consecutive
years of food insecurity, driven by drought, the impact of HIV/AIDS, and
the problems surrounding the government's land redistribution programme.
"We need the figures to see whether there will be shortages, and a need
for international humanitarian assistance ... between now and the next
harvest in April 2005," Lee explained.
The UN launched a revised donor appeal for Zimbabwe in April, seeking
additional funds through to the end of 2004, in an effort to address worsening
humanitarian conditions.
The UN said this year's harvest was expected to fall short of national
demand, but "the government will consider making a separate appeal for
general food aid, once additional information on the performance of the
current crop is available".
A diplomatic source told IRIN that the apparent vetoing of the crop assessment
"came as a shock to the donors, because they wanted to get some positive
signals that the government and the international community could work
together on humanitarian responses. The cancellation of the assessment
mission is a negative signal."
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