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Zimbabwe:
Food aid not being used as a political tool - govt
IRIN
News
November
02, 2004
Read this article
on www.reliefweb.int
JOHANNESBURG -
Concerns that food aid could be used as a political tool in Zimbabwe's
upcoming parliamentary elections have been rejected as "baseless" by the
government.
Spokesman Steyn Berejena
on Tuesday dismissed a recent Amnesty International (AI) report claiming
that the government's forecast of a bumper harvest had been "widely discredited",
and warning of "further violations of the right to adequate food and the
right to freedom from discrimination in the run-up to the 2005 parliamentary
elections".
The AI report, 'Zimbabwe:
Power and Hunger - Violations of the Right to Food', states that despite
an earlier government forecast of a bumper maize harvest of 2.4 million
mt, "stories of hunger and food insecurity in Zimbabwe emerge almost daily",
and that "rather than fulfil its obligation to ensure the right to food
for everyone under its jurisdiction, the government of Zimbabwe is manipulating
the country's food shortages for political purposes and to punish political
opponents".
International food
aid was halted in mid-2004 when the government said the country would
produce enough crops for domestic consumption.
"The cessation of
most international food aid distribution has left millions of people dependent
on grain distributed by the government-controlled Grain Marketing Board
(GMB), which has a near monopoly on the trade in and distribution of maize
- the staple food in Zimbabwe. But it is unclear whether the GMB has sufficient
stocks to meet the country's grain needs. The GMB also has a history of
discriminatory distribution of the grain it controls. Those who do not
support the ruling party, the Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic
Front (ZANU-PF), have regularly been denied access to GMB grain," AI alleged.
However, Berejena
said that under the government's food aid programme "people are not required
to produce [ZANU-PF] party cards - that's not a requirement. When the
needs assessment is done it is not a requirement that one has to produce
party cards".
Food aid distributions
were not conducted by politicians: "They are done through the civil servants
and social welfare departments; through the traditional leaders, who identify
the vulnerable within their communities."
If politics did play
a role in food aid distributions, he said, "you would rather give it to
the opposition to win their support".
As to the accusations
that the government's predicted bumper crop had failed to materialise,
Berejena said it was impossible to expect the GMB to have the entire 2.4
million mt grain harvest in its depots.
"We don't expect the
GMB to have 2.4 million mt - it's not possible to have it stored in the
various depots because, since the forecast, people have been consuming
[harvested crops] and not all the food is going to be housed in the depots.
For example, farmers, after harvesting, say 10 mt, will sell whatever
is surplus and keep some for domestic consumption, animal feed, etc. There
is inter- and intra-community trading as well," Berejena explained.
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