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ZIMBABWE:
No crop growing allowed in urban areas, say police
IRIN
News
June 22, 2005
Http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=47764
BULAWAYO - The Zimbabwean
government has outlawed urban farming, sparking fears of a deepening food
crisis, as poor families have relied on the practice to stave off hunger
and generate an income.
Over the past three weeks, police have demolished illegal structures and
arrested informal traders in the country's towns and cities in an ongoing
crackdown the government has said is aimed at cleaning up urban centres.
The operation has been condemned internationally, as about 200,000 people
have been left homeless and livelihoods have been lost.
The police have now warned that growing crops in urban or peri-urban areas
will no longer be allowed.
Faced with mounting poverty, acute food shortages and a chronic drought
that has drastically reduced agricultural output, many urbanites had taken
to cultivating the staple food, maize, and other small grains on patches
of land near their homes.
Mthulisi Ncube, who lives in Sizinda township in Zimbabwe's second city,
Bulawayo, had already started preparing small fields for the next planting
season in October. According to experts, extensive farming was being done
on land earmarked for cultivation purposes by the local authorities.
But police spokesman Wayne Bvudzijena told IRIN they were under government
instructions not to allow any farming activities in urban areas, whether
the land was designated for such purposes or not.
"The reason is very simple - one does not necessarily need some kind of
expertise to understand - a lot of harm is being done to the environment.
Why can't those who want to cultivate crops go to rural areas, where people
are being allocated farms under the land reform programme?" said Bvudzijena.
Small vegetable gardens outside people's homes would not be affected,
Bvudzijena added.
However, the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) secretary
for agriculture, Renson Gasela, said while he also disapproved of planting
on undesignated land, especially amid a maze of houses in townships, he
saw nothing wrong with farming in approved areas.
Gasela said urban cropping was a long-standing tradition in Zimbabwe,
and he feared that banning the practice would have hard-hitting consequences
for many poor urban dwellers already grappling with food and fuel shortages.
In a good year urban farming accounted for between 50,000 mt to 100,000
mt of the annual harvest, he commented.
He queried Bvudzijena's assertion that those who wanted to farm should
approach the authorities for an allocation under the land reform programme.
According to Gasela it was evident that the ruling party was determined
to drive urban people, most of them MDC supporters, to rural areas, where
it could manipulate and intimidate them.
However, environmentalists have commended the move, saying some of the
country's towns and cities were under threat of floods, as excessive cultivation
was taking place on river banks.
"We totally understand and appreciate the need for urban people to supplement
their incomes, but they should not do it the wrong way. Ideally, farming
should be done on farms, not in towns. What we have witnessed is an irreparable
damage to the environment, which will certainly have dire consequences
for our beloved cities," said an official with the NGO, Environment Africa.
Humanitarian organisations have warned that up to 4.5 million Zimbabweans
require food aid, while a United States-funded assessment group, the Famine
Early Warning System Network, noted in its latest report that food security
in urban areas was deteriorating.
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