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Assessment
of the Food Situation in Zimbabwe - August/September 2002: SUMMARY
National
NGO Food Security Network (FOSENET)
October
12, 2002
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The National
NGO Food Security Network (FOSENET) involves 24 non government organisations
that collectively cover ALL districts of Zimbabwe, and all types
of communities.
FOSENET members
subscribe that food distribution in Zimbabwe must be based on a
platform of ethical principles that derive from international humanitarian
law, viz:
- The right
to life with dignity and the duty not to withhold or frustrate
the provision of life saving assistance;
- The obligation
of states and other parties to agree to the provision of humanitarian
and impartial assistance when the civilian population lacks essential
supplies;
- Relief not
to bring unintended advantage to one or more parties nor to further
any partisan position;
- The management
and distribution of food and other relief with based purely on
criteria of need and not on partisan grounds, and without adverse
distinction of any kind;
- Respect for
community values of solidarity, dignity and peace and of community
culture.
As one of
its functions FOSENET is monitoring food needs, availability and
access. Reports from 62 NGO field monitors from 43 districts of
Zimbabwe for August and September 2002 indicate that:
- Food needs are higher than in the
July round. Almost all areas had less than one months food stocks,
some provinces (Matabeleland North and South) had none while others
(Masvingo, Midlands and Manicaland) were approaching this situation.
- Food supplies are reported to be
falling. The frequency of GMB deliveries is less than in the July
round and least in provinces with least household food stocks.
Reported GMB prices reached an upper range of Z$190/10kg.
- Formal market supplies are low,
especially for maize, oil and bread, although reported sugar supplies
seem to be improved. Informal market supplies continue at up to
Z$1200/10kg, particularly in provinces where household stocks
and GMB deliveries (and thus alternative food sources) are lowest.
- Elderly people, people with disabilities,
orphans, patients and young children were most commonly identified
as vulnerable. These groups faced specific reported barriers in
access to all sources of food, including relief food.
- People with disabilities and the
elderly were reported to be relatively poorly catered for by relief
relative to their identified vulnerability. Procedures, poor mobility
and school drop out were reported as barriers to relief in children
who have dropped out of school, people with illness or disability
and orphans.
- The cash for work programme was
reported to have variable levels of payment and different target
groups across districts.
- High levels of population movement
were reported during August/ September. Migration into districts
was primarily due to people returning after job loss or for informal
trade and then moving onto resettlement land, and out migration
primarily reported to be due to people moving out to seek resettlement
land or farmworkers losing jobs. Few reports were obtained of
permament movements for food. The presence of displaced people
was more frequently reported Matabeleland South, Masvingo, Mashonaland
West and Mashonaland Central.
Several issues emerge from this report:
- The groups identified as most
vulnerable in terms of food needs are also those that appear to
have least access to all sources of food, including relief.
- Household food stocks are generally
at less than one months supply, GMB deliveries are inadequate,
food in formal markets almost absent and in informal markets unaffordable.
- The provinces that seem to have
lowest household food stocks also appear to have least access
to controlled price state food and face the largest markups on
private markets, further undermining their food security.
- Speculation on food, largely through
informal markets, is not being controlled. Formal market food
sales have dwindled substantially.
- The poorest have least resources
to shift between (dwindling) alternative food sources. Even GMB
sales have become unaffordable to some.
- Political bias continues to be reported
in food access.
FOSENET
welcomes feedback on these reports.
Follow
up queries and feedback to: FOSENET, Box CY2720, Causeway, Harare
- fosenet@mweb.co.zw
Visit the FOSENET
fact sheet
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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