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Zimbabwe:
Secrecy could threaten access to food
Human
Rights Watch
August 13, 2004
http://www.hrw.org/english/docs/2004/08/12/zimbab9230.htm
New York - The
Zimbabwean government's lack of transparency on grain availability
in the country could jeopardize access to food for millions of Zimbabweans
in the coming months, Human Rights Watch said in a briefing paper
released today. Human Rights Watch called on the Zimbabwean government
to make this information public immediately.
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.
The 11-page
briefing paper, "The
Politics of Food Assistance in Zimbabwe" documents how the Zimbabwean
government threatens its citizens' access to sufficient food by
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's operations in food distribution and assistance.
"By withholding
vital information on grain availability, the Zimbabwean government
is gambling with its citizens' access to food," said Peter Takirambudde,
executive director of Human Rights Watch's Africa Division. "Under
international law, the government must take all necessary steps
to fully ensure its citizens' right to adequate food."
In May the Zimbabwean
government announced that this year's harvest would produce 2.4
million metric tons of maize, a figure significantly higher than
last year. While there is general consensus that the 2004 crop was
better than that of 2003, U.N. agencies, donor countries and nongovernmental
organizations have challenged the government's estimate for this
year. In June a member of parliament raised questions about the
government's estimate, leading Parliament to authorize an investigation.
Based on its
estimate, the government has decided not to renew its appeal for
general international food aid. As a result, despite skepticism
concerning the government's estimate and the widely held belief
that Zimbabwe will experience food shortages this year, the World
Food Program has been unable to make plans and raise money for providing
general food assistance to Zimbabwe.
"Without international
food aid, the government's grain board will be the only source of
assistance for many Zimbabweans in need," said Takirambudde. "In
recent years, the grain board has been widely accused of discriminating
against supporters of the political opposition."
The briefing
paper also notes that while the donor community has supported limited
food assistance in the former commercial farm areas, where land
was expropriated and resettled under land reform, political considerations
continue to influence the donors' programs. In addition, the World
Food Program and international relief agencies have made strong
efforts to prevent and rectify any interference in the process of
identifying those eligible to receive food aid. However, Human Rights
Watch remains concerned that the process used to register food beneficiaries
may still leave out certain highly marginalized groups like households
headed by children.
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