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Recovery
will cost more
IRIN News
June 01, 2009
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=84649
The international humanitarian
community has increased its donor appeal for Zimbabwe by over 30
percent to better reflect the depth of need in the ongoing crisis.
"Clearly, significant
changes in the country's political and socio-economic landscape
have occurred since January 2009," the United Nations Humanitarian
Coordinator for Zimbabwe, Agostinho Zacarias, said at the launch
on 1 June of the revised Consolidated Appeals Process (CAP) 2009
in the capital, Harare.
The need to revise the
CAP, the most important tool for raising resources for humanitarian
action, had become apparent by early March, when the initial appeal
for US$550 million had ballooned to around $719 million needed to
support the key areas of agriculture, health, education, food aid
and safe water.
A countrywide cholera
outbreak and a spike in food insecurity during the lean season had
"aggravated an already difficult socio-economic environment
of hyperinflation and collapsed basic social services," the
CAP said.
Six million people had
limited or no access to safe water and sanitation; 1.5 million children
required support to access education; 800,000 people were in need
of food aid, and 44,000 children younger than five years needed
treatment for severe acute malnutrition.
Priscilla Misihairabwi-Mushonga,
Minister of Regional Integration and International Cooperation,
said the government recognized that "the social-economic situation
in Zimbabwe would have deteriorated to levels that could easily
have lead to social unrest" without the support of the international
community.
"The revised CAP
comes at a time where Zimbabwe has moved into a new context, not
only politically, but also socially and economically."
The formation in February
2009 of the Inclusive Government - comprising President Mugabe's
ZANU-PF, and the opposition Movement for Democratic Change - led
to the Short-Term Emergency and Recovery Programme (STERP), which
had "paved the way for the country's rehabilitation,"
the CAP said.
Beyond
humanitarian
While the CAP is a strictly
"humanitarian" financing tool, and thus traditionally
restricted to short-term emergency needs, the revised version tried
to bridge the gap between humanitarian and development work in the
new Zimbabwean context. "Essentially, the revision reflects
a combination of new opportunities and deepening needs," the
document noted.
Previous appeals had
underlined the need for assistance in water and sanitation, health,
education and protection, but "most sectors continued to suffer
from lack of support - it is from there that the concept of 'humanitarian
plus' activities emerges in this revision, including activities
that are transitional in nature, but which ... are considered time-critical
and life-saving."
Misihairabwi-Mushonga
noted: "This revised CAP takes into cognizance the expressed
need for Zimbabwe to move from the humanitarian-support stage to
the recovery stage - 'Humanitarian plus' simply means Zimbabwe is
no longer a country in crisis but a country in recovery."
The CAP document was
less optimistic: "In spite of the positive impact of the humanitarian
response and initiatives by the Inclusive Government, the international
community remains relatively cautious."
It is uncertain whether
the revised CAP will translate into more funding; at $246 million
the initial appeal was still only 45 percent funded by the end of
May, and more than half that amount was carried over from 2008,
with an aditional 18 million coming from money available in the
UN Central Emergency Response Fund. Actual funding to the CAP was
therefore only 17 percent, compared to 25 percent at the same time
a year ago.
The STERP, too, remains
under funded. Of the $18.4 billion required until the end of 2009,
by April African governments had pledged only $400 million in credit
lines.
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