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ZIMBABWE: Govt admits food aid required
IRIN News
June 02, 2005
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=47442
HARARE - Zimbabwean
President Robert Mugabe on Wednesday told visiting UN Special Envoy to
Southern Africa, James Morris, that the country requires food aid to cope
with a drought-linked food crisis.
Speaking to journalists in the capital Harare, after he had met Mugabe
at the headquarters of his ruling ZANU-PF party, Morris said: "The president
said that he welcomed food assistance and food assistance that comes with
a humanitarian commitment."
An estimated three to four million Zimbabweans - a third of the population
of 11.6 million - are expected to need food aid over the next year, particularly
in the lean season starting in December, as a result of drought, poverty,
the impact of HIV/AIDS and the disintegration of social service delivery.
Morris said he did not expect obstacles in working with the Zimbabwean
government. "We have worked well together and we will work through the
numbers [of people in need] as we go forward," Morris said.
Mugabe last year called a halt to general feeding programmes run by humanitarian
agencies and their NGO partners, saying the country was expecting a bumper
harvest.
He had forecast a 2.4 million mt maize crop but only about half a million
mt of the staple food was delivered to the state-run grain depots.
The government has in the past accused donors of using food aid to campaign
for the opposition Movement for Democratic Change while the opposition
has accused the government of using food as a political weapon, withholding
it from perceived opponents.
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