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Survival
farming
IRIN
News
December
08, 2009
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=87369
Poor farmers
in the dusty village of Mandamabwe, in Masvingo Province, southeastern
Zimbabwe, have resorted to a groundbreaking activity to salvage
what they can of their 2010 harvest.
"We call
it chera udye [dig or starve], meaning one must dig the
sun-hardened earth with bare hands and then plant the limited seed
available. If you fail to do that you will die of hunger,"
said Evelyn Imbayago, 44, a mother of four.
Every day, on her way
to tending a tiny plot of germinating groundnut plants, she walks
past a large portion of her land that lies fallow. This year she
had no fertilizer and only a small amount of seed; there are no
oxen to pull the plough. So, to make what she does have count, she
has dug a shallow hole with a hoe for each seed, she told IRIN.
Lack of draught-power
and essential inputs are common problems in the drought-prone region,
and this year's growing season promises to be a testing one for
most farmers in the area.
Sauros Debwe, 52, who
also farms in Mandamabwe, told IRIN that the farmers who had oxen
now demanded as much as US$25 to till a single acre (0.4 hectare),
which was unaffordable.
"In the past we
could pay those who had animals for draught-power in kind, but this
time there has not been much in the granaries - we had to depend
on grain assistance provided by [donors] to survive. Now there is
nothing to spare and exchange for tilling."
Debwe said most farmers
could not afford to wait until assistance arrived, and had been
digging small planting holes in anticipation of the first rains.
Expect
a rough season
This year Imbayago decided
to switch from maize, the traditional staple, to groundnuts, which
thrive in the sandy soil, even without chemical fertilizers. "I
can sell the groundnuts or make peanut butter for sale, then use
the money to buy mealie-meal [maize-meal]," she said.
She has not received
any assistance this year. "Our traditional donors have not
been forthcoming, while government has also failed to assist since
the rains started falling. I really don't know how I will cope."
Last season, when most
subsistence farmers struggled to feed their families and aid agencies
had to step in with food assistance, she received support from Care
International, a humanitarian aid organization working to enhance
food security and alleviate poverty in the area. The seeds and fertilizer
they gave her got her and her family through the year.
After months of procrastination,
the Zimbabwe government announced a new input subsidy scheme in
November. According to the state-run Herald newspaper, the initiative
would make seed available at a highly reduced price of US$1 per
kilogram of maize or sorghum seed, and US$7 for a 50kg bag of fertilizer
through the Grain Marketing Board (GMB), a parastatal monopoly.
"We don't know whether
that will help," said Kainos Muponda, the Mandamabwe village
head. "Not many of us have that kind of money. Moreover, one
has to travel to Masvingo town, where the GMB depot is, incurring
additional costs in fares and carriage."
The UN Office for the
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) has estimated that some
1.9 million Zimbabweans will need food assistance during the peak
hunger season from January to March 2010.
OCHA launched an international
appeal on 7 December 2009 for US$378 million to buy food and medicines,
and bolster health, education and sanitation in the economically
crippled country.
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