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ZIMBABWE:
Doubt over govt's ability to import sufficient maize as hunger figures
rise
IRIN News
October 05, 2005
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=49380
JOHANNESBURG - A senior food security
expert in Zimbabwe says the government will have to work more closely
with the international community if it hopes to feed millions of
people facing shortages this year.
The EU official, who wished to remain anonymous, said that despite
a "significant effort" by the government to import urgently needed
maize in recent months, there remained "much uncertainty" over whether
it would meet the country's requirements.
Zimbabwean authorities have refused to appeal for international
aid to stave off widespread hunger, insisting instead that the government
has the capacity to import the 1.2 million mt needed to fill the
food gap. Aid agencies estimate that up to four million people will
go hungry until the next harvest.
"The latest figures show that between April and September, 480,000
mt of maize was brought in, mainly from South Africa. More recently,
however, there appears to be a decline in the import quantity,"
the official told IRIN on Wednesday.
Sydney Mhishi, Zimbabwe's director of social welfare, reportedly
told a parliamentary committee on Tuesday that the government was
gearing up to provide 2.2 million people with emergency food aid.
According to the official Herald newspaper, the elderly, orphans
and the sick will benefit from the food handouts. "The rest of the
country's population can afford to buy maize, which is being imported,"
Mhishi was quoted as saying.
Aid agencies were also concerned that the reluctance of the Grain
Marketing Board (GMB), the official purchasing agent, to include
them in its distribution plans was likely to complicate relief operations.
"At the moment there is very little known about how the food aid
will be distributed, which areas or groups will be prioritised,
and how the government plans to get the food to communities located,
at times, 80 km from the depots," the source explained.
Another question was whether Harare could afford to import more
maize after its recent payment to the International Monetary Fund
(IMF). In a surprise move the country managed to scrape together
a substantial portion of its debt and avoid expulsion from the Fund.
"We do know the government has been looking for forex to pay the
IMF, but whether or not it can pull together additional funds remains
to be seen," the Harare-based expert said. "We can speculate that
perhaps some private dealers in South Africa are ready to take a
risk, with the hope of getting their money back."
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