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Community
Assessment of the Food Situation in Zimbabwe - November 2003
National NGO
Food Security Network (FOSENET)
December 23, 2003
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This thirteenth
round of NGO and community based monitoring nationally covers the
month November 2003. This round of monitoring includes information
related to food access, food security-production- poverty links
and coping strategies.
Coverage
of the data
The monitoring information is collected from sentinel wards within
districts. It is presented by district, to provide for two or more
site reports on any indicator. Data for the period November 2003
is drawn from 142 monitoring reports from 58 districts from all
provinces of Zimbabwe, with an average of 2.4 reports per district.
Summary
- Two thirds
of districts report a worsening food supply situation, a small
reduction from October 2003, with the improvement primarily due
to relief supplies.
- The pattern
of vulnerability has remained the same, viz: The elderly, the
unemployed, people living with AIDS, displaced farm workers and
orphans. There is further report of displacement of farmworkers
and new report of farming activities being disturbed by violence
around political activity.
- In and out
migration has been reported in 47% of the districts. This represents
a slight decrease from the 53% reported in October. The reports
indicate that the increase in costs of travel have affected movements,
including for food.
- Food prices
in the formal and parallel market continue to rise beyond the
reach of many. People are reported to be hungry even when the
staple foods are available on the market. GMB food which is relatively
more affordable is widely reported to be scarce. Only 17% of districts
were reported to have GMB deliveries during the month.
- Fertiliser
availability has improved over the past month. A third of the
districts report fertilizer available on the local market compared
to the quarter that reported this in October. Maize seed supply
has however fallen as 28% of districts report seed availability
compared to the 35% reported in October. Some seed distribution
activities are reported to be taking place in districts. Inadequate
supplies, high demand and inflation continue, however, to push
the fertilizer and maize seed prices up by between 30 - 40% in
the past month.
- Commercial
food availability is better than it was at the same period last
year, using maize meal and cooking oil as indicator foods. Escalating
prices continue to be the major problem in accessing commercial
food. The parallel market is reportedly serving as a major source
of food as well as a source of income for urban residents.
- Relief was
reported to have resumed in thirty six districts (62% of districts).
Relief activities are now widely reported in major urban areas
for the first time. Lack of relief in resettlement areas was noted
in reports. The cash for work programme was reported to be taking
place in half of the districts, an increase on the 22% reported
in October.
- Reports of
political interference with food distribution were made from 19%
of districts, with reports coming from all provinces.
- Reports of
asset sales to raise money to buy food were made from twenty six
districts (45%), equal to that reported in October. The impact
of these sales, the trends on school access, particularly with
rising fee levels, and the impact on wider household social welfare
and poverty will be explored in more detail in the January monitoring.
This and future rounds of monitoring will now widen the review
of household wellbeing in Zimbabwe to examine the wider issues
related to social and economic wellbeing and to food security.
Past rounds of food security monitoring have highlighted that
household and community food security are directly linked to wider
economic and social factors, with economic inflation, poverty,
AIDS and ill health, transport costs, social and political marginalization
undermining food security, and poor food security and some food
seeking activities undermining health, education access, household
assets and leading to deepening poverty. The food security monitoring
is thus now widening in 2004 to a wider civic monitoring to inform
the wider range of relief and recovery strategies needed to address
these issues.
Visit the FOSENET
fact sheet
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