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WFP
retains control of food distributions
IRIN News
August 25, 2003
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=36183
Johannesburg
- The Zimbabwean government has given an assurance that the World
Food Programme (WFP) will remain in control of humanitarian food
distribution, despite a controversial new policy directive issued
by the government this month, UN Humanitarian Coordinator Victor
Angelo told IRIN on Monday. "We were told that we can proceed
as we did last year ... We will be implementing the [food distribution]
programme this month with no operational change at the ground level.
The UN will keep monitoring the situation on the ground," Angelo
said. The ministry of public service, labour and social welfare
had issued a new policy guideline altering the memorandum of understanding
with WFP, which authorised the agency and its partners to distribute
food aid in the country. The new directive allowed WFP and its partners
to deliver food to distribution points, but the government would
then be responsible for the selection and physical distribution
of the food to beneficiaries through local government structures
and village authorities. NGOs would perform only a monitoring role.
The directive,
the "Policy on Operations of Non-Governmental Organisations
in Humanitarian and Developmental Assistance in Zimbabwe",
has been condemned as opening the door to the politicisation of
WFP-delivered food. Urban council and mayoral elections are due
this weekend. "In Zimbabwe the only real currency at the moment
is food. The implications of this directive are extremely worrying,
as it gives the government free rein over who receives food and
who does not. The country really does not need this at this juncture,
especially since it is the NGOs who are keeping the most vulnerable
communities afloat," spokesman for the opposition Movement
for Democratic Change party, Paul Themba Nyathi, told IRIN. He also
alleged that Western donors would be unlikely to fund Zimbabwe's
food aid appeal if the selection of beneficiaries and distribution
was under the control of the government. An estimated 5.5 million
Zimbabweans will be in need of food aid by January 2004.
Explaining the
government's position, public service minister July Moyo was quoted
as saying: "We appealed for the food aid and we should determine
how it is distributed." On Wednesday last week, Angelo and
WFP country representative Kevin Farrell met with Moyo "to
ask for clarification" on the new policy. Angelo said he was
assured that the government's policy guidelines "do not mean
that we as the UN will change the way we operate", adding that
if there was any political interference by the authorities, the
incident would be reported to the government. "The [memorandum
of understanding] signed with the UN system is still valid ... The
basis of the agreement with the government is that we implement
our programmes with total autonomy," Angelo stressed.
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