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ZIMBABWE:
Clarity needed on harvest figures says Human Rights Watch
IRIN
News
August 12, 2004
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=42649
Read the HRW briefing paper on the issue titled, 'The
Politics of Food Assistance in Zimbabwe'
JOHANNESBURG - Human
Rights Watch (HRW) has warned that the Zimbabwean government's alleged
"lack of transparency" on grain availability could jeopardise access to
food for millions of people in the coming months.
The rights group called on the government to make information on grain
availability public, as "concealing the basis for its 2004 crop yield
estimate, the size of its strategic grain reserve and the details of the
government's Grain Marketing Board operations in food distribution and
assistance ... threaten its citizens' access to food".
In May the government announced that this year's harvest would produce
2.4 million mt of maize, a figure significantly higher than last year.
"While there is general consensus that the 2004 crop was better than that
of 2003, UN agencies, donor countries and NGOs have challenged the government's
estimate for this year," HRW said.
Based on its crop forecast, the government made a decision not to renew
an appeal for general international food aid. "As a result, despite scepticism
concerning the government's estimate and the widely held belief that Zimbabwe
will experience food shortages this year, the World Food Programme has
been unable to make plans and raise money for providing general food assistance
to Zimbabwe," the rights group added.
The Famine Early Warning Systems Network (FEWS NET) also warned that the
"controversy surrounding Zimbabwe's cereal production for the 2003/04
agricultural season, coupled with the lack of data on cereal imports,
continues to make thorough food security analysis and response planning
very difficult".
FEWS NET said: "The suspension of general feeding in April, May and June
this year by food aid agencies in the country, in response to the government's
announcement that the country has enough food from the 2003/04 ... harvest,
has left the majority of food insecure households more dependent on their
limited consumption, expenditure and income coping strategies."
It noted that the Zimbabwe Vulnerability Assessment Committee, in which
the government participated, had estimated that about 2.2 million rural
people would require food aid between July and November 2004. The figure
was expected to peak at 2.3 million during the hunger period [December
2004 to March 2005].
Peter Takirambudde, executive director of HRW's Africa Division, noted
that "by withholding vital information on grain availability, the Zimbabwean
government is gambling with its citizens' access to food".
"Under international law, the government must take all necessary steps
to fully ensure its citizens' right to adequate food," he added.
FEWS NET said available "sub-national data" indicated that food security
"is seriously threatened" in 11 rural districts in Zimbabwe, as they "are
expected to use up their cereal harvests within the next four months".
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