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Mugabe
seeks food aid
Institute
for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR)
(Africa Reports: Zimbabwe Elections No 14, 14-Mar-05)
By Alfred Tsotso
in Harare
March 14, 2005
http://www.iwpr.net/index.pl?archive/ar/ar_ze_014_2_eng.txt
President Robert Mugabe - who
last year told the international community that his people did not need
food aid - has quietly established contacts to secure emergency help from
outside to avert a looming famine.
"We do not want food that is foisted upon us," Mugabe insisted
last November.
However, with parliamentary
elections scheduled for March 31 and agricultural analysts warning of
a serious shortfall in maize production, he appears to have changed his
mind.
The European Community, which
has imposed travel and banking bans on Mugabe and his ministers, has been
the among the first to react to the new initiative, quietly allocating
15 million euro to those Zimbabweans most vulnerable to food shortages,
especially orphaned children and people living with AIDS. Food bought
with the European money will be distributed through such United Nations
agencies as UNICEF and the Food and Agricultural Organisation, FAO.
In a terse statement issued
in Brussels, a spokesman for the community said, "Unprecedented
numbers of people [in Zimbabwe] are facing food insecurity and rising
rates of HIV/AIDS infection.
"The majority of the
population can barely cover their most basic needs. The health, water
and sanitation sectors have collapsed. The country counts more than one
million orphans [in a total population of 11.5 million], mainly as a result
of the AIDS pandemic. Diseases that were once eradicated from the country
such as cholera and dysentery are again being reported due to the absence
of basic water, sanitation and health services."
UN officials in Harare said
Mugabe had swallowed his pride and approached them for help in formulating
a major appeal to be made to the international donor community as soon
as the election results are declared in around three weeks time.
"Food assistance will
make up more than 70 per cent of the appeal," a senior UN official
told IWPR.
The government, however, has not yet gone public yet about the initiative
for fear of ridicule and a widespread outbreak of anger ahead of polling
day. Mugabe and his agriculture minister, Joseph Made, have spent recent
months boasting that a record harvest was expected from April onwards.
The UN officials say they will
establish a food emergency coordinating team with the government as soon
as it is known which party will form the next government. Preliminary
work has been going on since last December, with the social welfare ministry
spearheading the "talks about talks".
Current limited supplies of
maize meal, the country's staple food, have created a booming black
market and high retail prices that are beyond the reach of most Zimbabweans.
The main famine and weather-monitoring
organisation in southern Africa said the situation was many times worse
than conveyed by the government to the UN. The Johannesburg-based Famine
Early Warning System Network, FEWSNET, said 4.8 million Zimbabweans -
nearly half the population - urgently require food aid or they could starve.
Council minutes published in
Bulawayo, the country's second city, record at least 24 people as
having died of starvation since the beginning of the year.
"There is a lot of suffering
in this city," said the mayor, Japhet Ndabeni-Ncube, of the opposition
Movement for Democratic Change, MDC. "Many children and some elderly
people are dying as a result of malnutrition."
Hunger is also stalking the
rural people of Chimanimani, in the highlands 450 kilometres east of Harare.
Traditional chiefs, who are normally the vanguard of Mugabe's ZANU
PF, have this time thrown their weight behind MDC candidate Heather Bennett,
the wife of the current MDC member of parliament Roy Bennett, who is currently
in prison. Heather Bennett - who lost a baby when ZANU PF thugs attacked
her in 2000 when they invaded the couple's farm, murdered workers
and raped women - addressed a rally of around 5,000 people on March 6.
A local chief stood up and
told her, "To hell with a government that can't provide its
own people with grain."
A drive into any rural area
reveals stunted maize withering in the blazing sun, and once-productive
farms lie idle everywhere. Mugabe boasted that the confiscation of white
farms and the resettlement on them of landless peasants would boost agricultural
production. But the government has dismally failed to provide such basic
inputs as seeds, fertilisers and tractor fuel to the "new farmers".
Many have been driven to plant what few seeds they do have on untilled
land, with disastrous consequences for yields.
When the first stories of the
impending famine began surfacing at the end of last year, agriculture
minister Made described them as an attempt by "enemies of Zimbabwe"
to tarnish the government and to undermine the "success" of
the land reform programme.
Agricultural experts have since
said it is unlikely that more than 300,000 tonnes of maize will be gathered
in the coming harvest season. Zimbabwe needs a minimum of 1.8 million
tonnes of maize a year in order to feed its entire people.
At the beginning of this month,
having already opened clandestine negotiations with the UN, Mugabe admitted
that only 40 per cent of confiscated white land allocated to new black
farmers is actually being utilised. He threatened to repossess such land.
It was his first tentative admission that his land reform programme had
failed.
*Alfred Tsotso
is the pseudonym for an IWPR journalist in Harare.
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