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Zimbabwe
likely to let in large aid mission - UNICEF
Peter Apps,
Reuters
May
05, 2005
http://www.reliefweb.int/rw/RWB.NSF/db900SID/MMQD-6C4QG2?OpenDocument&rc=1&cc=zwe
JOHANNESBURG
- Zimbabwe must allow a massive United Nations humanitarian food
aid operation or many may die as 5.5 million people face serious
food shortages after a regional drought, UN agency UNICEF said on
Tuesday.
UN food agencies
cut back operations in 2004 after President Robert Mugabe said the
country had more than enough food, but reports of shortages have
continued and aid workers say drought across southern Africa has
all but destroyed the 2005 harvest.
"I would be
very surprised if the government didn't take a different line this
year," UN children's agency UNICEF southern and east Africa regional
co-ordinator Per Engebak told Reuters. "It's quite clear that what
we're seeing this year affects almost the entire region."
Food was a major
issue in Zimbabwe's recent parliamentary election, won by Mugabe's
ZANU-PF party but widely criticised by western nations as not free
and unfair, with the opposition demanding the government appeal
for aid.
Some aid workers
and observers have accused Mugabe's government of destroying Zimbabwe's
farming sector with chaotic and violent seizures of white-owned
farms for landless blacks.
Neighbouring
Zambia, Mozambique and Botswana have also seen staple maize crops
seriously damaged by drought, while the HIV pandemic has left many
farmers dead or sick and unable to farm.
Zimbabwe's government
has only allowed the UN World Food Programme to continue targeted
feeding programmes reaching just under a million people, mainly
AIDS orphans and other at-risk groups.
Agencies say
they have long hoped to be allowed to enlarge their operations,
but with little joy.
In a telephone
interview, Engebak said people would likely starve to death if the
government did not allow in UN assessment missions and then food
aid.
"If the international
community, backed and supported by the UN, is not in a position
to effectively help to mitigate the effects we will be allowing
scenes of that nature," he said. "Absolutely," he said, asked if
that meant people might die.
Last week, Zimbabwe's
state media reported the government-run Grain Marketing Board would
buy 1.2 million tonnes of maize for the country after Mugabe admitted
publicly the country faced shortages but promised no one would starve.
The opposition
Movement for Democratic Change says the country lacks the foreign
exchange for such a purchase, and South African traders say Zimbabwe
has defaulted on past purchases.
In March, Public
Service and Social Welfare Minister Paul Mwanga told Reuters Zimbabwe
would seek donor assistance only if food needs exceeded the budget
the government had set aside.
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