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ZIMBABWE:
No need for food aid, says govt
IRIN
News
May 12, 2004
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=41020
JOHANNESBURG - The
government of Zimbabwe says the country has produced enough food to meet
domestic consumption requirements and will not require international aid,
but independent crop forecasts suggest otherwise.
Official news organisation ZIANA and the Herald newspaper quoted the Public
Service, Labour and Social Welfare Minister, Paul Mangwana, as saying
that "we don't need food aid from outside the country. We generally believe
we produced enough for local consumption, and we have told our international
partners about this".
Although there were "some areas that would have food deficits, these would
be covered through internal food distribution, and not imports", Mangwana
was quoted as saying.
The latest announcement follows the cancellation of a planned crop assessment
mission by United Nations agencies in Zimbabwe after the government withdrew
its participation. The UN assessments are conducted at the invitation
and with the participation of the host government.
According to aid agencies, some 5.5 million rural Zimbabweans and 2.5
million people in urban areas were in need of food aid up to the latest
harvest, which began in April.
The World Food Programme (WFP) has been conducting general and targeted
food aid distributions since the food security crisis began two years
ago.
WFP spokesperson in Zimbabwe, Makena Walker, told IRIN on Wednesday that
the agency had received no official notification from the government that
it would not require any post-harvest emergency food aid.
In the meantime, WFP's targeted distributions, such as school feeding
and home-based care activities, would continue indefinitely.
"We hope to reach 650,000 beneficiaries this month," Walker said, adding
that "there will be no general distributions in May and June because harvest
has come in".
The Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development said the government's
latest assessments for the 2003/04 season indicated that 2.4 million mt
of the staple, maize, would be produced.
The Herald reported that while the country "was forced to import food
and appeal for assistance from international donors in the last two years
... it experienced good rains in the 2003/04 agricultural season and indications
were that Zimbabwe could produce a bumper harvest".
These projections differ from those of independent agencies.
In its March food security update, the Famine Early Warning Systems Network
(FEWS NET) noted that the "Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development
released optimistic production estimates for 2003/04".
It argued that "historical data, the reduced contribution of the large-scale
commercial farming sector to maize production, the poor rainfall distribution
in the early half of the season, reduced use of fertiliser and limited
labour for weeding, provide bases for questioning this optimistic outlook".
FEWS NET added that "assuming the government's [planted] area estimates
are accurate, production ranges are likely to fall between 1.2 million
mt and 1.7 million mt".
National consumption is estimated at around 1.8 million mt.
A report commissioned last month by the German development agency Friedrich
Ebert Stiftung, "Famine in Zimbabwe", predicted shortfalls of between
600,000 mt and 900,000 mt.
The uncertainty over crop forecasts, given the lack of a UN agency verification
mission, could have serious implications for any humanitarian response
if Zimbabwe needed to appeal for aid later in the year.
The UN Humanitarian Coordinator in Zimbabwe, J Victor Angelo, observed
in a statement on Tuesday that "credible production figures are an essential
tool for planning purposes".
He said the UN was "concerned that, should a food assistance need be identified
later in the year, and were the government to issue an appeal at that
time, a very rapid response may not be possible".
The UN would not have been in a position to carry out an assessment of
needs at the time of harvest, "and hence, the international community
might be hesitant to respond; and WFP would have scaled back operation,
and would need time to build up the necessary operational capacity," Angelo
warned.
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