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Zimbabwe
- Crisis over?
IRIN News
September 12, 2012
http://www.irinnews.org/Report/96289/Analysis-Zimbabwe-crisis-over
At the height
of Zimbabwe's humanitarian crisis in 2002/2003, more than
seven million people were in need of food aid. A decade later, the
number of people in need has declined to a million, though it could
go up by another 600,000 in 2013.
Still, two of
the country's biggest donors, the European Union and the US, and
their implementing partner, the UN, say Zimbabwe is on its way to
recovery and development. The EU has announced that it is scaling
down its humanitarian assistance.
The decision
should come as no surprise, reckoned the European Commission's
Humanitarian Aid department (ECHO). The department "has progressively
decreased" the funds allocated to Zimbabwe, from about US$18.9
million in 2010 to around $12.6 million in 2011, then to approximately
$6.3 million in 2012, said David Sharrock, the European Commission's
spokesperson on International Cooperation, Humanitarian Aid and
Crisis Response.
Needs
remain
Yet the decision
comes amid a drought that the World Food Programme (WFP) says will
leave one in every five rural households in need of food assistance
next year.
NGOs also warn
that a tense stand-off between government coalition partners ZANU-PF
and factions of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) on
a new constitution - critical for holding free and fair elections
- could lead to violence.
Meanwhile, the
coalition
government, formed in 2009, is cash-strapped. Newspapers reported
last week that the government had turned to South Africa and Angola
for help with a $400 million shortfall in its budget.
Finance Minister Tendai Biti was quoted saying the country needed
the money to fund the 2012-2013 agricultural season, annual bonuses
and a possible referendum on the new constitution.
"Unexpected
events will continue to require intermittent and targeted humanitarian
assistance until the country's economy more fully recovers,"
Hillary Renner, a US government spokesperson told IRIN. But the
US government is "optimistic that the large-scale 'humanitarian
emergency phase' of Zimbabwe's history has passed".
Donors
switching tracks
The latest data
from the UN Financial Tracking Service (FTS) shows that the December
2011 consolidated appeal for more than $268 million for Zimbabwe
has received little more than half that amount.
Donors, cash-strapped
themselves, have begun to examine the effectiveness of continuous,
large-scale aid interventions, said an aid worker. "With the
incessant crises [like the Horn of Africa last year and Sahel this
year], they have to now look at interventions relatively. Then Zimbabwe
does not seem like such a major crisis."
An early warning
official pointed out that even the food crisis in Zimbabwe is "not
really that serious" compared to the several millions in need
in the Sahel and the Horn of Africa.
Sharrock explained
that the EU's funding has gradually evolved from large-scale
emergency response to "smaller and more targeted assistance
focusing on the most vulnerable groups and aiming at improving the
population's resilience." Or as one aid worker put it,
seeing "how much value you can get for a stretched dollar."
The EU has moved
from funding only emergency food aid to funding nutrition, health,
water and sanitation, and protection programmes. FTS data show that
the health and education sectors are better funded than last year,
but agriculture programmes are worse off.
Sharrock hastened
to add that the EU was not aware of the emerging food crisis when
the funding allocation was made last year. "However, the situation
is linked to chronic food insecurity and is not likely to result
in a severe food emergency characterized by high acute malnutrition
rates and above-average mortality rates," he said, adding
that the EU is assessing the possibility of providing assistance.
NGOs like World
Vision say it is difficult to categorize the situation in Zimbabwe.
"In a complex context like Zimbabwe, it is not either 'emergency'
or 'development,'" wrote Edward Brown, World Vision's
national director in Zimbabwe, in an email to IRIN. "In fact,
it can be both at the same time. Disasters can be highly localized,
and economic growth may only happen in specific areas." The
NGO is focusing on both short and long-term solutions.
Brian Raftopoulos,
a Zimbabwean academic at the Centre for Humanities Research at the
University of the Western Cape in South Africa, echoed this idea,
saying, "You cannot say that Zimbabwe is in an emergency or
development phase - it is not one or the other."
Aid in Zimbabwe
is about maintaining a balance between "continuing to scale-up
service delivery, particularly in the social sectors, while enhancing
national systems in these sectors", said Alain Noudehou, the
UN Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator in Zimbabwe. The focus
is on "sustainable recovery", while the "general
humanitarian situation in the country had remained stable".
Political
developments
Although the
EU is reducing its humanitarian aid to Zimbabwe, its development
aid policies to the country are being reconsidered as long-imposed
sanctions are suspended.
European governments
placed targeted sanctions on the leadership of ZANU-PF, then Zimbabwe's
ruling party, after flawed presidential elections in 2002. Two kinds
of sanctions were used, "restrictive measures" and "appropriate
measures", said Piers Pigiou, the project director of Southern
Africa for the International Crisis Group. Restrictive measures
included a travel ban and asset freeze on President Robert Mugabe
and over 100 senior party officials, while appropriate measures
suspended EU aid to the Zimbabwe government under Article 96 of
the Cotonou Agreement.
Since 2009,
the EU and its member states have provided Zimbabwe with $1 billion
in development assistance, though none directly to the government.
But since the
beginning of this year, "there has been a paradigm shift"
in the EU's relationship with Zimbabwe and ZANU-PF, said Pigou.
In July, the EU suspended the appropriate measures, sending the
message, "let's try and breathe some life" into this stand-off,
as the sanctions had not been effective in making ZANU-PF reform,
Pigou explained. Rather, they had been used as "propaganda"
by the ZANU-PF, which portrayed the sanctions as an effort to cripple
the country. "[The EU] can no longer allow ZANU-PF to win this
propaganda war."
The EU was also
responding to repeated calls from the Southern African Development
Community - which has been trying to normalize relations between
ZANU-PF and the opposition - to remove all sanctions. "With
the suspension of the appropriate measures, the EU is also now telling
SADC, 'We trust you with the process.' So the ball is
now in SADC's court," Pigou said. In July, the EU also indicated
it was willing to remove most sanctions targeting ZANU-PF members
and allies should they hold a credible referendum on the constitution.
Still, the EU
has not yet reinstated development aid to the government, taking
a wait-and-see approach to the recent developments.
Pigou pointed
out, "Should the country slip back into a crisis, in the absence
of a free and fair elections, [with] violence next year, the EU
can easily revoke the suspension."
Catherine Ray,
the EU's development spokesperson, said the EU suspended the
appropriate measures after being "encouraged by the steps taken
by the Inclusive Government to improve the freedom and prosperity
of the Zimbabwean people."
The move will
hopefully "add to the positive momentum and encourage further
reforms in the preparations for credible and peaceful elections,"
she added.
Although the
coalition government does seem to be making progress, many fear
that the ZANU-PF has not really reformed. The US government has
begun to laud the recent progress, but it has not revoked its own
sanctions on direct support to the government or travel restrictions
on ZANU-PF officials.
In its World
Report 2012, Human Rights Watch acknowledged that Zimbabwe had made
"significant progress in improving the country's economic
situation and reversing the decline of the past decade", but
also said human rights activists and journalists continue to be
intimidated and that laws are being used selectively to restrict
and harass them
Reactions
in Zimbabwe
The political
situation - combined with the scale-down in humanitarian aid - has
caused concerns.
Should humanitarian
aid actors withdraw, food aid could be used as a "political
weapon" by ZANU-PF, especially during elections, which will
likely be held next year, Abel Chikomo, executive director of the
Zimbabwe Human
Rights NGO Forum, said.
The same concern
was reiterated by Japhet Moyo, secretary general of the labour federation
Zimbabwe Congress
of Trade Unions. He said that with no support systems in place,
the elderly, unemployed and others could fall victim to the use
of food as a political weapon.
"The government
is bankrupt as it cannot support the welfare system, which is why
we find the decision [by the EU] very puzzling indeed," said
Moyo.
Meanwhile, the
food crisis in Zimbabwe is deepening. Last week, the country's
National Early Warning office said parts of the country could be
affected by yet another dry spell during the coming planting season,
and urged farmers to sow varieties of maize that take longer to
mature.
Alfred George
Bango, a retired civil servant from Sontala Village in Matabeleland
South Province, reported, "There are no pastures for our livestock
to graze. We are receiving a 50kg bag of maize from government once
every four months, which is not adequate, but other villagers are
surviving by borrowing food from neighbours. A large number of people
eat only one meal a day."
EU's Sharrock
said the humanitarian situation in Zimbabwe, "though still
fragile, has stabilized considerably since the political crisis
and socio-economic breakdown of 2008-2009 - which resulted in widespread
violence, a major food crisis and a large-scale uncontrolled cholera
outbreak with many deaths."
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