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ZIMBABWE:
Bleak outlook for vulnerable, say aid workers
IRIN
News
September
06, 2005
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=48934
JOHANNESBURG
- The dilemma of food availability and affordability in Zimbabwe
could translate into worse-than-expected needs during the traditional
lean season before the new harvest in March/April next year, say
aid workers.
In its latest situation report the World Food Programme (WFP) noted
that the "availability and/or accessibility [of food] remained problematic
in much of the country", and that the state's "Grain Marketing Board
(GMB) depots have consistently received insufficient grain to meet
the needs of vulnerable households".
"In addition to the problems and delays in sourcing adequate grain
by the GMB, lack of transport and fuel supplies are exacerbating
the situation. The GMB has reportedly asked local authorities to
organise and collect grain from the depot with their own transport,
but this has met with little or no success," WFP pointed out.
Market traders have reported shortages of maize and are expecting
prices to rise. In Masvingo province in the southeast of the country,
"the GMB maize grain was available in local shops in two districts,
and reappeared in open markets in two additional districts", but
"shortages of bread, milk and salt continued" in Zimbabwe's second
city, Bulawayo.
"I am very concerned that, due to high inflation and the resultant
constant price increases of staple goods and essential services
(including education, which has is now very costly), the worst-case
scenario from the 2005 ZimVac [Zimbabwe Vulnerability Assessment
Committee report] will become a reality," an aid worker, who wished
to remain anonymous, told IRIN.
The Zimbabwe VAC report indicated that 2.9 million people - an estimated
36 percent of Zimbabwe's rural population - would require food aid
during the year ahead. The number of people in need was based on
the government's announced plan to import 1.2 million mt of maize
to address food shortages brought on by drought, inadequate access
to inputs and limited tillage.
However, if the imported maize was not made available through the
GMB, or if it increased in price, the number of people requiring
food assistance would rise substantially.
As a contingency measure, the World Food Programme has said it planned
to assist up to four million people in Zimbabwe in the year ahead.
But the aid worker told IRIN that "the operating environment is
also very difficult, due to the levels of bureaucracy" in Zimbabwe.
Save the Children's acting programme director in Zimbabwe, Julian
Smith, noted that "there will be an earlier hunger season" in the
country as a result of erratic GMB supplies.
"I am not optimistic in terms of the outlook. I fully support those
... who are privately planning for the worst-case scenario [of having
to feed more than 4 million people]," he said.
The VAC report based its estimates of the number of people who would
need aid on the assumption that GMB maize would be continuously
available at a high but stable price, but "neither of these assumptions
has held".
"The number of people unable to meet their [food] needs will therefore
be much higher," Smith noted. "Some humanitarian agencies put the
rural population in need of food assistance at closer to 5 million."
Zimbabwe's total population of 11.6 million has faced four consecutive
years of food shortages.
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