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Crop failures spark famine fears
Institute
for War & Peace Reporting
(Africa Reports: Zimbabwe Elections No 05, 08-Feb-05)
By Elias Mugwadi
in Harare
February 08,
2005
http://www.iwpr.net/index.pl?archive/ar/ar_ze_005_1_eng.txt
Millions said to
be in need of food aid, largely as a result of chaotic land reform programme.
Zimbabwe is sliding
inexorably into famine as crops fail and the ZANU PF government remains
unwilling to import grain to cover the production deficit.
"Land preparation
by resettled [black] farmers is way behind schedule," admitted Local
Government Minister Ignatius Chombo, who is chairman of a government food
supply task force. "We were targeting four million hectares [of tilled
cropland], but only 900,000 hectares have been prepared."
A report just released
by the Famine Early Warning Systems Network, FEWS NET, the regional prediction
service, said 5.8 million Zimbabweans – half the total population – are
in need of food aid.
The problem stems
largely from the chaotic organisation of President Robert Mugabe’s land
reform programme, in which white commercial farmers have been driven from
the land since 2000 to be replaced largely by peasant subsistence farmers
and government ministers, army officers, judges and top civil servants
with no farming skills.
The majority of the
new farmers have no ploughing equipment and they have been sowing maize,
the country’s basic food crop, on untilled soils. In addition, because
the handful of highly skilled maize seed farmers have been driven from
their land into exile, this season’s crop has been planted with untreated,
low quality seed. There have also been severe shortages of fertiliser
and other critical inputs.
"The biggest
drawback over the past four years we have seen here has been the lack
of ploughing equipment," Obediah Mupanganyama, a resettled farmer
at Vairona, a previously white-owned farm near Mazowe, 67 kilometres north
of Harare, told IWPR.
"Most farmers
have been planting on unploughed land which brings us to the problem you
are looking at. The weeds have overwhelmed the crops and we have no machinery
or chemicals to deal with them."
Mupanganyama said
there were a few private tractors for hire, and the cost of doing so,
350,000 dollars [60 US dollars], was far beyond anything that any "new
farmer" could afford.
Black settlers at
the previous white-owned Bally Hooly Farm at Glendale, 83 km north of
Harare and formerly a rich wheat and cotton area before Mugabe’s land
invasion strategy was launched, told IWPR they had been unable to till
their soil and had scattered only untreated maize seeds.
Elsewhere hungry Zimbabweans
are staving off starvation by selling property or receiving money from
relatives among the three million or more of their countrymen who have
gone into exile. Many have sold cattle and the tools they need to produce
crops. "There aren’t obviously starving people walking the streets,
but people are having to resort to things like selling their last cow
to buy food," a senior western diplomat told the Reuters news agency.
The Independent, one
of the country’s few remaining private weekly newspapers, reported that
many people are now going without food for days, with children fainting
in schools and women miscarrying as a result of malnutrition. Around the
country, hungry and irritated people have been standing in long queues
for hours to buy tiny rations of maize, and police have had to calm unruly
crowds.
Eddie Cross, economic
spokesman of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change, described
the situation as frightening. "Food shortages are causing extreme
hardship across the board and across the country," he said. "The
political implications are profound. I would hate to run an election campaign
amidst a food crisis for which there is no solution."
By February, the maize
crop throughout the country is usually at knee-high level. But IWPR’s
enquiries showed that many farmers were still planting – far too late
to secure a decent crop because the summer rains are now ending. The coming
harvest is likely to be one of the worst ever because of poor planning,
erratic rains and absence of low interest loans.
The forecast by international
donors and the political opposition that the chaotic land reform programme
would be unworkable and a recipe for disaster is turning out to be true.
While no accurate figures are available, farm experts estimate that Zimbabwe’s
agricultural production has fallen by 70 per cent in the last four years.
Just three years ago,
Zimbabwe was still the breadbasket of southern Africa, fully self-sufficient
in basic foodstuffs, with surpluses for export. Now it is a net food importer
and production of such key crops as maize, wheat, tobacco, horticultural
produce, soya and cotton has been slashed.
Last year, the ZANU
PF government banned the import of food by international humanitarian
organisations. It claimed a record 2.4 million tonnes of maize and wheat
had been harvested. But this was shot down when parliament’s farm sub-committee
said only 388,000 tonnes were produced, representing only one-sixth of
the country’s requirements.
Minister Chombo’s
gloomy harvest prediction has been contradicted by Agriculture Minister
Joseph Made who boasted that the new settlers would produce a record grain
harvest in the next few months of three million tonnes.
Following a harvest
of less than one million tonnes last year, such a production total would
be "a staggering turnaround, if true", said James Morris, executive
director of the UN’s World Food Programme, WFP. "If the projections
are not correct, a great number of people will be very much at risk. I
don’t know what the evidence is that things will be any better than last
year. The next 90 days are going to be crucial."
*Elias Mugwadi
is a pseudonym for an IWPR contributor in Zimbabwe.
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