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ZIMBABWE:
Rural areas feel bite of hunger ahead of lean season
IRIN News
October 04, 2005
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=49360
JOHANNESBURG
- Poor rural households in drought-ravaged southern Zimbabwe have
exhausted their food stocks and are resorting to eating wild roots
in a bid to stave off hunger.
Erratic supplies
by the state's Grain Marketing Board (GMB) and the lack of essential
commodities in rural shops have combined to undermine food security
in the semi-arid Matabeleland region, aid workers told IRIN.
In the district
of Tsholotsho, in Matabeleland North province, 49-year-old widow
Sharon Mpofu said she was foraging for wild roots, identified as
fit for consumption by an elder of the San clan from her village,
to feed her two children. The San are renowned for their survival
skills.
The family had
also begun to reap the rewards of a small community vegetable garden,
established as part of the NGO Christian Care's irrigation and self-sufficiency
programme.
"This has
become our way of survival. Our maize-meal got finished last week;
it is not even available in the shops. In the past few weeks it
was available, although some of us would struggle to get the money,
but these days it is not there," said Mpofu.
A Christian
Care aid worker told IRIN they had established that over 300,000
of Tsholotsho's population of around 600,000 were food insecure.
"We have
done some research in readiness for food [aid] distributions ...
people are literally going for days without food and there is high
risk of malnutrition. Some are now eating wild roots - the situation
is very dire," the aid official warned.
Tsholotsho Tjitatjawa's
village headman, Nkosilathi Sibanda, said: "Although no one
has died as a direct result of hunger, people are starving - they
need food. Shops are empty and families are going for days without
a decent meal." He noted that supplies from the GMB were sporadic,
and when maize-meal was available it was often unaffordable.
A 50 kg bag
of maize-meal normally sold for Zim $80,000 (US $3), which was beyond
the reach of most rural people.
"What we
need at this point is assistance from [aid] organisations,"
Sibanda said.
Aid agencies
had been waiting for authorisation from the government to begin
programmes in Zimbabwe.
The World Food
Programme (WFP) received written authorisation from the Ministry
of Public Service, Labour and Social Welfare to begin food distributions
to targeted vulnerable groups in 49 districts around the country
on 29 September.
"Through
this programme, an estimated three million food insecure people
will receive a monthly ration of cereal and pulses. WFP will work
with 11 NGO cooperating partners. Distributions will begin as soon
as possible and continue through to April 2006," the aid agency
said in its latest situation report.
An official
from the GMB, who wished to remain anonymous, said although the
state grain procurement agency's silos in both Matabeleland North
and South regions were fast running empty, "the ministry of
agriculture says there are several tonnes of maize in transit from
South Africa".
"We are
aware of the dire situation facing many people, and we hope food
security will improve if we are to get such deliveries," the
official added.
A recent report
by the Famine Early Warning Systems Network and the WFP on informal
cross-border food trade quoted the South African Grain Information
Service as saying that by the end of August, the GMB had imported
403,000 mt from South Africa at a rate of 86,000 mt per month.
"A rate
which is 28 percent below the planned monthly import of 120,000
mt per month - Zimbabwe requires a total of 1.2 million mt of maize
before the next harvest," the researchers commented.
Thubalami Mkhosi,
a grain miller in the Mangwe district of Matabeleland North, told
IRIN: "The last time I got supplies from the GMB was in early
August, but now their reserves have gone dry, there is virtually
nothing in some of them [the silos]. This means that we are out
of business, and that people are going hungry because there is no
mealie-meal [maize-meal]."
Aid agencies
have estimated that some four million people will require food aid
in Zimbabwe in the months ahead.
The UN Food
and Agriculture Organisation has also warned that prospects for
the 2006 agricultural season are being seriously threatened by the
short supply and high costs of inputs such as seeds, fuel, and fertiliser.
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