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ZIMBABWE: Economic crisis compounds food shortages
IRIN News
November 19, 2003
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=37981
JOHANNESBURG
- Zimbabweans continue to face a particularly severe humanitarian
crisis, with nearly half the population having had their livelihoods
eroded by severe macroeconomic decline and precarious food security,
said the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs
(OCHA).
"What began
as a food crisis in Zimbabwe in 2002 has grown into a major humanitarian
emergency, with people suffering the effects of a deteriorating
economy, HIV/AIDS, depleted social services and policy constraints,"
OCHA said in an appeal to donors.
The organisation
noted that "as the country enters its fifth successive year
of economic decline, Zimbabwe faces critical shortages of foreign
exchange to maintain essential infrastructure, and inflation has
soared".
Inflation reached
526 percent in October, according to figures issued on Tuesday by
the state's Central Statistical Office (CSO). Compared with prices
in October a year ago, the cost of living went up 525.8 percent,
against September's annual rate of 456 percent, the South African
Press Association reported.
The Humanitarian
Appeal 2004 for Zimbabwe is based on plans by UN Agencies and partner
NGOs, to respond to the humanitarian crisis by concentrating on
three main areas: firstly, to prevent loss of life through food,
nutrition, and critical health interventions; and secondly, to mitigate
the impact of the crisis on vulnerable groups by supporting household
livelihoods and basic services, and addressing the impact of HIV/AIDS.
The third aim is to develop a productive dialogue among humanitarian
stakeholders to strengthen co-ordination, in order to protect the
most vulnerable.
"The HIV/AIDS
pandemic is central to the crisis. Recent estimates indicate that
around 34 per cent of Zimbabwe's 15 to 40 age group is infected,
and more than 2,500 people die every week of AIDS-related causes,"
OCHA said.
Compounding
the crisis is a steady decline in the delivery of health, education,
social and public services due to a lack of finance, and the loss
of human resources to emigration and AIDS.
"One result
is that malaria, tuberculosis and cholera cases are on the rise.
Another result is that Zimbabweans face a severe food security crisis
in 2003-04. An estimated 5.5 million people will require food aid
during the coming year. The country has enough food to feed its
population for just four to five months," OCHA said.
In the Consolidated
Appeal for Zimbabwe, agencies request US $109.4 million to meet
outstanding funding requirements.
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