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ZIMBABWE:
Resettled farmers need assistance
IRIN News
January
10, 2005
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=44996
HARARE - Most
of Zimbabwe's newly resettled farmers have had a slow start to the
main planting season, and experts warn that this might jeopardise
the country's food supply this year.
New farmers, particularly those who were given the A1 communal model
farms during the fast-track land redistribution programme that commenced
in 2000, cited a lack of draught power as the main obstacle to planting.
At an A1 farm about 40 kilometres north of the small town of Mvuma
in Midlands province, more than half the settlers said they had
been forced to adopt zero tillage, known locally as "chibhakera",
a simple technique of planting seed into the soil with little or
no prior land preparation.
Tavaka Bhasera, 54, told IRIN that since the first rains fell in
the second week of December last year he had managed to cultivate
less than half an acre of land. Bhasera moved to the farm in January
2003, while his family remained at his rural home in Chivi, over
180 km away.
He had decided to leave most of his family members behind because
the government had instructed them not to build permanent structures
on the new plots, a situation he said made him uncertain about his
future as a new farmer.
"The situation here is disturbing. I, like most of my neighbours,
do not have cattle to use as draught power. As you can see, I don't
have a cattle pen and a goat is the only form of livestock I can
boast of. As a result, I have been forced to use my own hands to
till this land, which is almost virgin," said Bhasera, who is also
the headman of the farm.
He said he had also left his cattle in Chivi, partly because of
the uncertainty and also due to the lack of means to transport them.
Resettled farmers have been promised tractors to help them with
tillage through the government's District Development Fund (DDF).
"All the time we travel to Chivhu, [where] DDF officials say they
are coming soon, claiming that they are ploughing in other areas.
However, we wonder at which places they are using the tractors because
we have not heard of anyone in this area who has received their
services," Bhasera remarked.
The official Herald newspaper recently quoted DDF director-general
James Jonga as saying that less than half of the fund's 733 tractors
were still operational due to the lack of foreign exchange to keep
the ageing fleet running.
Local Government Minister Ignatius Chombo, who is also chairman
of the cabinet task force on inputs supply and distribution, said
farmers were encouraged "to use all forms of tillage, namely mechanical,
manual labour, animal draught power and tillage co-operatives, in
order to bring more land under production in this agricultural season."
Director of the department of Agricultural Research and Extension
Services (AREX), Shadreck Mlambo, warned that this year's harvests
were under threat. "Right now, we are still far away from completing
land preparation, and time is fast running out," he said.
In the Guinea Fowl area, a former dairy farm hub about 50 km south
of the Midlands city of Gweru, farmers are pooling resources to
till as much land as possible.
"The DDF has helped some of us, but the number is very small. Considering
also that we do not have cattle and donkeys to use as draught power,
we sat down and decided to come together as families to [plant]
... using chibhakera [zero tillage]. The programme is done on a
rotational basis to ensure that every household gets its chance.
Also, those who have cattle have come to our rescue, but they do
so for a fee and are overwhelmed," said Guinea Fowl resident Margaret
Chimbwa.
Thanks to this communal programme, known as "nhimbe", Chimbwa's
family had managed to plant two acres of crops, but this represented
a small fraction of her 15-acre plot, which had largely lain fallow
since she moved to the farm three years ago.
Even though the government had provided each household with 30 km
of maize seed and two bags of Compound D fertiliser, for use when
the crop begins germinating, the effort would be wasted if farmers
were unable to till enough land, she added.
Davison Mugabe, president of the Zimbabwe Farmers' Trade Union (ZFTU),
an organisation representing about 12,000 black farmers, urged the
government to invest "massively" in agriculture if the land reform
exercise was to succeed.
"Land reform will become a success story with massive injection
of investment by the government. There is need for bigger credit
facilities for the farmers and much more mechanisation, as well
as the rebuilding of the national herd of cattle, while inputs [should
be] provided at affordable prices. Without this, we will continue
to underperform," Mugabe said.
Last year the government predicted a bumper maize harvest of 2.4
million mt. However, a report released by the parliamentary portfolio
committee on lands and agriculture said as of October 2004, the
state-owned commodity buyer, the Grain Marketing Board, had received
only 388,558 mt.
A Zimbabwe Vulnerability Assessment Committee (ZimVAC) report in
April 2004 projected that around 41 percent of the rural population
(3.3 million people) would be food insecure from December 2004 to
March 2005 if the price of maize reached Zim $750/kg. Maize is already
selling at above Zim $1,100/kg in most rural areas, reaching Zim
$2,000/kg in the worst hit districts, FEWS NET said in a report
released in November.
"At current prices, therefore, the projected food insecure rural
population is arguably higher than 3.3 million people," the US-funded
early warning unit noted.
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